Something other than numbers and characters has been used for a range.
Erroneous code example:
let string = "salutations !";
// The ordering relation for strings cannot be evaluated at compile time,
// so this doesn't work:
match string {
"hello" ..= "world" => {}
_ => {}
}
// This is a more general version, using a guard:
match string {
s if s >= "hello" && s <= "world" => {}
_ => {}
}
RunIn a match expression, only numbers and characters can be matched against a range. This is because the compiler checks that the range is non-empty at compile-time, and is unable to evaluate arbitrary comparison functions. If you want to capture values of an orderable type between two end-points, you can use a guard.