I want to be able to "contain" the generic nature of my type because it does not effect my const value
and instead of writing channelling through the generic type in every function and method that uses X
I just want to say X::VALUE
(I know I could just pass in a specific type since it doesn't matter and the compiler would shut up, but I don't think that qualifies as a nice solution.. :D)
That's the "problem" when you basically program at the "type-level" (which is why we love Rust). When you would want to express everything at that level with maximum genericity then GATs are unavoidable. Thus, I honestly don't understand how 1.0 of Rust releaseed without it -- 'tis such an elementary feature of the language, well, it should be at least..
(I hit this wall every 2 weeks basically.. sometimes even more frequently..)
The reason often said is that was just a trade-off between community building and striving for purity of concepts. Had 1.0 been blocked on GATs, specialization, and so on and so forth, it definitely would have less enthusiasts and projects using it now.
Not claiming that this was a bad/good reason, just stating that it's indeed a grey area.
@Shepmaster But yes, thank you very much for keeping me informed. :) I have already reported my investigation on that PR.
@E4netisheretodownvote Oh I understand that, and TBF mine was more of a theoretical question. I got the practical aspect of this. Probably I would've asked the questions: Why didn't this come up earlier and more frequently? For the last 5 years, why did we focus on async and other big chunks of work, when GATs are easily more important than those..?
@PeterVaro That is a much more interesting question!
Perhaps the intensive blooming of Rust towards web environments made it seem more lacking in asynchronous constructs.
As in, most mature web frameworks out there have and rely on async I/O, and that could be perceived as a regression in some use cases. This is also something I might need to look into for DICOM-rs.
Still, this doesn't explain why GATs are stuck the way they are now, as if only a "cliqued" yet small portion of the community often trip on the lack thereof.
Perhaps.. I don't know.. I definitely do not think that web frameworks should be considered as a priority for a systems programming language over its expressability, correctness / conciseness, and comfortability.
(The rest will come easily after one made those work..)
@E4netisheretodownvote Basically I'm implementing a VT100 screen emulator targeting WASM. I created something similar in pure JS 5-6 years ago and I thought it would be a nice candidate to port it. Aaanyway, there are many, many challenging bits in there, the most interesting one is to express the screen (i.e. channels, pixels, regions, grids, characters, glyphs, etc.) in a generic way, so that static buffers, dynamically sized screens, and "double-spaced" glyphs (this is specific to VT100) could be
used interchangeably. And because the program needs to both write and read to the screen this makes things quite a bit complex to express with lifetimes and traits without GATs
Aand now I'm fucked. While I was able to introduce my own iterator-type which is specific for a given lifetime because I could use a while-let easily over a for-loop (not ideal, but still doable and clean), I can't do the same thing with io::Write, unless I want to reimplement everything from scratch.. This is the third time today where I would need GATs.. :(
unless I'll use unsafe at the top level, where I guarantee the safety by-usage over by-compile-time-constraints I can't see any other alternative.. Hey Rust core devs, we need GATs, now more than ever, can you hear us?
Well, it might comfort you to know that we've never been closer to being able to use GATs. This has been merged, which suggests that future nightlies might support GATs behind a flag.
Or it could seem to work but break outstandingly.... Doesn't matter had GATs.
@E4netisheretodownvote Well, that sounds awesome, and obviously a huge thumbs up for that, but I try not to do anything with nightly -- it shouldn't be treated as a viable option for any project IMO: it could change whenever it needs to without worrying about breaking code that uses it. So, still miles away, but at least one step closer..