New Rustacean  learning The Rust Programming Language

e009: Composing a Rustic tune

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Sinopsis

Notes Last time, we looked at generics and traits at a high level. This time, we dig deeper on traits, looking specifically at std::iter::Iterator as an example of a powerful trait that can be composed across types, and then at how we might compose multiple traits on a single type. We also talk about the syntax for traits, the use of marker traits, some of the things you can’t presently do with traits, and even just a smidge about the future of traits in Rust. All that in less than 20 minutes! You’ll find today’s source example fairly interesting, I think: it’s just one type, but it uses almost every concept discussed on the show today! Links Nick Cameron: “Thoughts on Rust in 2016” “Upcoming breakage starting in Rust 1.7, from RFCs 1214 and 136” RFC 1214: Clarify (and improve) rules for projections and well-formedness RFC 136: Ban private items in public APIs The Rust Book: Traits Trait objects (dynamic dispatch) The Rust reference: std::iter and std::iter::Iterator Add Drop PartialEq and Eq PartialOrd