@E_net4removesmeta-commentary I imagined how you emerged from the dark, with a small breeze lifting the dust upward, circulating it, and you finally appeared as a black hedgehog with a scary white face!
Well the things bothers me 1 : implementing a new function 2 : if you have fields more than 3 it looks terrible on new 3 : While reading the code you can't tell which argument bound to which field
If you have a mixture of private and public fields, and the private fields have reasonable default values, you can also use MyStruct { public_field1: value1, public_field2: value2, ..Default::default() }.
This will only allow you to set the public fields, but it may fit your use case.
Well there is a lot of solution of course but having this kind of feature might come in handy, especially attempting to mock objects when writing unit test
@O'Niel I'll be making a few minor tweaks to that. But I would recommend emphasizing the fact that you're compiling against the upstream version of OrbTk, rather than the one published on crates.io.
@E_net4removesmeta-commentary not sure about recursive copy. Do you mean that it will create nested folders for you if they don't exist while copying a file? do you have a link for the equivalent function in fs-extra?
@E_net4removesmeta-commentary let me have a quick look
@E_net4removesmeta-commentary nope the buil-in fs module only have copyFile... Do you just need this one function? maybe there's a properly promisified 3rd party module that does this
@E_net4removesmeta-commentary do you have graceful-fs as well or just thinking to use it? Also very rarely packages interfere with each other. Thankfully monkey patching happens quite rarely in Node.js
My goal is to implement a function that returns another function, which returns some trait. To be more specific, the returned function should itself return a Future.
To return a function that returns a concrete type, we obviously can do this:
fn returns_closure() -> impl Fn(i32) -> i32 {
|x...
it is type is -> impl Future<Output= impl Fn() -> i32>
From the rfc : In addition to functions, async can also be applied to closures. Like an async function, an async closure has a return type of impl Future<Output = T>