And, ah! @Shepmaster. Regarding this: stackoverflow.com/questions/50312999/… You are right of course that adjusting a DateTime<Utc> is horrible. I found a better way, in case you want to change the comment about it in your own answer.
I'm not sure that your answer fully answers the question though, as OP says he has a NaiveDate to begin with, not a string.
I have to say though, that the Chrono API is extremely difficult to get to grips with.
Conversions between the library's own types should be simple.
If we can't use that post as an authority, I believe it was Abraham Lincoln who once said "Be excellent to each other". That's some wisdom right there.
@PeterHall this was debating too, actually, I was in the side, "I not a teacher, I'm not here to be nice to bad question/answer or to help SO to make more money"
Even a few days ago, I was called by a >1k rep user not being "in the spirit of the site", and my comments being a waste of SO's servers. The question was deleted the next day, which disproves that point.
I wonder if the choice of verb (have vs am) affects people's sense of identity. AM implies that your age is intrinsic to you somehow and defines what you are. While HAVE is just an attribute of yourself.
A library to do this should be possible. To create such a library, we would create a bidirectional mapping from TypeId to type name before using the library, and then use that for serialization/deserialization with a type marker. It would be possible to have a function for registering types that ...
I don't know how to feel about these types of answers
@Shepmaster Yeah I thought about that. What I found tho is that with try!/? my students lost track of what this stuff is actually doing. And sometimes you are in a function not returning Result and then you don't have a clue what to do...
@Shepmaster It might be necessary to abandon Box<Trait> and instead define a TaggedBox<Trait> which carries with it a type name, and ensures that the type are mapped to constructors somewhere.
@PeterHall I'm pretty sure it is necessary, because when you try to deserialize something you have to know what it is first. So the tag has to go in the serialization.