A crate for targeting and accessing actual implementation.
Take an example trait:
trait ScrapeTheInternet {
fn scrape_the_internet(&self) -> Vec<Website>;
}The trait represents some abstract computation. The trait exports a method signature that can be implemented by types. In this case, we can imagine what a true implementation of the trait will do: Actually scrape the internet.
implementation provides the [Impl] type as an implementation target for traits having the following semantics:
- The trait has only one actual, true implementation.
- Other implementations of the trait may exist, but these are interpreted as fake, mocked in some way.
implementation enables a standardized way of writing these actual implementations in a way
that allows the actual Self-receiver type to be unknown.
To define the actual, generic implementation of ScrapeTheInternet, we can write the following impl:
impl<T> ScrapeTheInternet for implementation::Impl<T> {
fn scrape_the_internet(&self) -> Vec<Website> {
todo!("find all the web pages, etc")
}
}This code implements the trait for [Impl], and by doing that we have asserted that it is the actual, true implementation.
The implementation is fully generic, and works for any T.
use implementation::Impl;
struct MyType;
let websites = Impl::new(MyType).scrape_the_internet();The advantage of keeping trait implementations generic, is that the self type might
live in a downstream crate. Let's say we need to access a configuration parameter
from scrape_the_internet. E.g. the maximum number of pages to scrape:
use implementation::Impl;
trait GetMaxNumberOfPages {
fn get_max_number_of_pages(&self) -> Option<usize>;
}
impl<T> ScrapeTheInternet for Impl<T>
where Impl<T>: GetMaxNumberOfPages
{
fn scrape_the_internet(&self) -> Vec<Website> {
let max_number_of_pages = self.get_max_number_of_pages();
todo!("find all the web pages, etc")
}
}Now, for this to work, Impl<T> also needs to implement GetMaxNumberOfPages (for the same T that is going to be used).
GetMaxNumberOfPages would likely be implemented for a specific T rather than a generic one,
since that T would typically be some configuration holding that number:
struct Config {
max_number_of_pages: Option<usize>
}
impl GetMaxNumberOfPages for implementation::Impl<Config> {
fn get_max_number_of_pages(&self) -> Option<usize> {
self.max_number_of_pages
}
}This crate is the solution to a trait coherence problem.
Given the trait above, we would like to provide an actual and a mocked implementation. We might know what its actual implementation looks like as an algorithm, but not what type it should be implemented for. There could be several reasons to have a generic Self:
- The
Selftype might live in a downstream crate - It is actually designed to work generically
If we had used a generic Self type (impl<T> DoSomething for T), the trait
would be unable to also have distinct fake implementations, because that would break
the coherence rules: A generic ("blanket") impl and a specialized
impl are not allowed to exist at the same time, because that would lead to ambiguity.
To solve that, a concrete type is needed as implementation target. But that type is allowed to be generic internally. It's just the root level that needs to be a concretely named type.
That type is the [Impl] type.
When we use this implementation, we can create as many fake implementations as we want.
License: MIT