"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..
"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
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.
@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.) — trentcl11 hours ago
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.
If 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...
@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)