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09:35
"For better or worse, we allow implementing foreign traits for foreign types. For example, impl From<Foo> for Vec<i32> is something any crate can write, even though From is a foreign trait, and Vec is a foreign type. "github.com/sgrif/rfcs/blob/sg-re-re-balancing-coherence/text/…
I had no idea that you could do that. I never even tried because the orphan rules should have forbidden it..
09:49
I don't understand
I through this was explicitly forbidden for a good reason
like that allow generic would produce an infinite number of possibility
The RFC is quite illuminating
well, if you say, english is a nightmare for me
 
1 hour later…
10:59
"In languages without coherence, the compiler has to have some way to choose which implementation to use when multiple implementations could apply. Scala does this by having complex scope resolution rules for "implicit" parameters. Haskell does this by picking one at random."github.com/sgrif/rfcs/blob/sg-re-re-balancing-coherence/text/…
That's a little unfair on Haskell. You have to explicitly enable the IncoherentInstances language extension
 
1 hour later…
12:11
That's a quite interesting RFC, however making the order of parameters matter puts even more pressure on crate authors to get this order "right". I hope it won't be a problem in practice.
@MatthieuM. That can be linted probably
Hm actually, that's not what it means...
12:33
@PeterHall I'm learning so many things about Rust this week.
I feel like I somehow switched universes while sleeping last night. Apparently you've always been able to do impl From<Foo> for Vec<i32>?
@MatthieuM. And this is apparently already how it works?? E0210
12:57
@trentcl Yes, because people usually simplify the orphan rule when describing it
Precisely because the exact rules are a bit weird
@PeterHall It's a self-perpetuating problem. For example, I wrote this yesterday:
You're not doing anything wrong; it's not possible to implement PartialEq such that true == Marker {} will compile, because you can't implement PartialEq for bool. (You can implement PartialEq<bool> for Marker, which would make the reverse (i.e. Marker {} == true) work. But it's probably better just to stick to trait objects and keep them behind & or Box.) — trentcl 11 hours ago
@trentcl :/
Well, at least I'm never going to forget it.
I think the main thing I've learnt this week is an intuition for when I need to reach for for<'a> to solve a problem
Previously, I would see it being used and it would mostly make sense. But if I had my own problem to solve, I might think of trying it, but I wouldn't know in advance if it was going to work.
 
4 hours later…
16:54
@trentcl this person is just wildly throwing around lifetimes :-(
impl<'context> Context<'context> {
    fn new<'write, W: Write + 'write>(output: W) -> Context<'write> {
@Shepmaster C'mon.. we've all done it
It's the Rust equivalent of when in C you get `warning: conversion to pointer from integer without a cast" and to fix it you slap a cast on there
When you're learning Rust and something doesn't work, you just try putting lifetimes everywhere until it compiles
@PeterHall i mean... sure. But you gotta have a hypothesis about what they mean, try to test it, then revise
maybe the problem is that no one knows the scientific method
I think the beginner's intuition is usually wrong
They think that the annotations do something
whereas they don't
16:58
@PeterHall This plus "I'll just wrap it in unsafe" will be the hallmark of freshmen CS students everywhere once Rust takes over
I'm also mildly cross that this question gets the "bare" error message as the title
gonna fix that somehow
they just let you describe what you're already doing in terms that the compiler can understand
@trentcl Luckily wrapping broken code in unsafe very rarely fixes it
17:14
@Shepmaster 100%
actually for rust....
^^
the question can be ask
I mean... you can say for any language, really
but it should be the 50th guess, not the 1st
I was typing a helpful suggestion :'(
oh well
18:06
0
A: Is there a byte equivalent of the 'stringify' macro?

kennytmIf you are using nightly Rust (since 1.28.0-nightly, 2018-05-23), you may enable the const_str_as_bytes feature which turns as_bytes() into a const function. #![feature(const_str_as_bytes)] fn main() { const AAA: &[u8] = stringify!(aaa).as_bytes(); println!("{:?}", AAA); // [97, 97, 97...

only dark magic can do this
18:27
Jeremy: Damnit Rust, do I really need to define all of these different lifetimes for my data? I just want a pointer!
Rust: I did not create the complexity, I just forced you to confront it. You must decide whether you truly need it.
3
Wise Rust was right. I hadn't really been thinking about data ownership, and once I actually did, it was clear that things could be simpler.
laugh in C ;)
@Stargateur @kennytm == "dark magic"
18:47
:P
 
1 hour later…
19:59
I saw a crawfish yesterday.
 
2 hours later…
21:30
@E_net4 Rustacean meets crustacean.
21:43
Is it possible to get a clippy warning for this kind of thing? stackoverflow.com/questions/50631189/…
It seems like a bit of a foot-gun
Relying on a const, which is always producing a different value.
Hello :) Hope you are all doing well!
Quick question. Is it possible to do something like: impl T where T : U?
I could also do: impl U but I think that might involve virtual calls when invoking the methods.
21:51
@NoelWidmer Yes
@PeterHall And that would then replace the virtual calls with non virtual ones, right? (As long as T is not a trait)
@NoelWidmer Well... I don't know about that necessarily. Depends what you have and what you are doing
if you have a method in that impl, you can't call it unless T is statically known to have a U impl.
But if you can call it, yes it will be static dispatch
if you can't, it will be a compile error
Wait... is T a type or a parameter there?
Did you mean: impl<T> T where T: U ?
@PeterHall Sure. The impl U for T needs to be in scope in order for the compilation to succeed. Oh yes, I guess that is what I meant.
T is supposed to be a generic type.
Is there anything you would put in that impl that couldn't just be a provided method on the trait?
So you want to implement methods for all types T that have U impls?]
@trentcl Yeah exactly..
22:01
@trentcl I guess I could do everything in the trait. But that would then cause virtual calls when invoking the functions. (I am not sure about that. That's why I am asking here)
@NoelWidmer It won't cause virtual calls
@NoelWidmer impl U { ... } will only work on virtual calls.
unless you make use a trait object
trait U { ... } is statically dispatched normally
I'd make an example but I should really be working
I'd make an example but I'm watching a show in Spanish and I don't speak Spanish, so I need to keep an eye on the subtitles :)
22:04
No problem @trentcl . I'll have to read up on that then. Good to have you guys around to shatter my assumptions from time to time :)
@NoelWidmer Maybe make an example on play.rust-lang.org and ask a question about the specific code
@NoelWidmer Iterator is done like this: all the methods except next are provided on the trait itself
But, in general, you are only doing dynamic dispatch if you're using an object
@PeterHall Are you suggesting I should ask on SO or in this chat?
You can ask here first if you like
22:08
I'd make an example but I'm lazy.
trololol
@PeterHall My QA ratio has a tendency I'd like to turn around. I guess it is not neccessary because I am not using trait object there.
@Shepmaster Thank you for the updated answer ealier today btw :)
@NoelWidmer Yes, another example of Shepmaster lazily improving almost every post that appears on SO.
@NoelWidmer np

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