if I understand correctly, the code put inside an enum the object, hard write the discriminant of the enum by doing f.write(&[1]) directly on the process memory, then just match the variant and return it.
@E_net4wantsmoreflags the part where someone think that having a stop function that prevent to continue to use the thing was a good idea leading to have this doc in rodio
@Stargateur & @DenysSéguret I believe whoever wrote that piece of code comes from C. If a union would have members which are trivially represented by a single memory block (e.g. primitives), this kind of casting would be safe, in fact it is used widely. However, with composite types, such as Vec and String this is not guaranteed, nor it should be. I'm not exactly sure what the author tried to achieve there TBF..
That's the double edge sword of "empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software" -- everyone means everyone, even people who have no idea of how lower levels work and what implications of their choices might have.
Whether this should be a goal of a language is a different subject. Personally I don't think so. Rust is a system programming language, with an insanely high-level feel, and in the right hands it is as safe as a system programming language can be, which is thousands times more than what we had in any language in this category before.
But that does not mean, one should neglect the lower level aspects IMO.