6

I am implementing a quick geometry crate for practice, and I want to implement two structs, Vector and Normal (this is because standard vectors and normal vectors map through certain transformations differently). I've implemented the following trait:

trait Components {
  fn new(x: f32, y: f32, z: f32) -> Self;
  fn x(&self) -> f32;
  fn y(&self) -> f32;
  fn z(&self) -> f32;
}

I'd also like to be add two vectors together, as well as two normals, so I have blocks that look like this:

impl Add<Vector> for Vector {
  type Output = Vector;
  fn add(self, rhs: Vector) -> Vector {
    Vector { vals: [
      self.x() + rhs.x(), 
      self.y() + rhs.y(), 
      self.z() + rhs.z()] }
  }
}

And almost the exact same impl for Normals. What I really want is to provide a default Add impl for every struct that implements Components, since typically, they all will add the same way (e.g. a third struct called Point will do the same thing). Is there a way of doing this besides writing out three identical implementations for Point, Vector, and Normal? Something that might look like this:

impl Add<Components> for Components {
  type Output = Components;
  fn add(self, rhs: Components) -> Components {
    Components::new(
      self.x() + rhs.x(), 
      self.y() + rhs.y(), 
      self.z() + rhs.z())
  }
}

Where "Components" would automatically get replaced by the appropriate type. I suppose I could do it in a macro, but that seems a little hacky to me.

2 Answers 2

10

In Rust, it is possible to define generic impls, but there are some important restrictions that result from the coherence rules. You'd like an impl that goes like this:

impl<T: Components> Add<T> for T {
  type Output = T;
  fn add(self, rhs: T) -> T {
    T::new(
      self.x() + rhs.x(), 
      self.y() + rhs.y(), 
      self.z() + rhs.z())
  }
}

Unfortunately, this does not compile:

error: type parameter T must be used as the type parameter for some local type (e.g. MyStruct<T>); only traits defined in the current crate can be implemented for a type parameter [E0210]

Why? Suppose your Components trait were public. Now, a type in another crate could implement the Components trait. That type might also try to implement the Add trait. Whose implementation of Add should win, your crate's or that other crate's? By Rust's current coherence rules, the other crate gets this privilege.

For now, the only option, besides repeating the impls, is to use a macro. Rust's standard library uses macros in many places to avoid repeating impls (especially for the primitive types), so you don't have to feel dirty! :P

2
  • Interesting, thanks. Are there any plans on providing support for something like this?
    – anjruu
    Sep 7, 2015 at 12:52
  • 2
    I don't know the exact plans, but to me, it seems like it would be possible to allow this if the trait is private (not exported from the crate) or if the impl could be marked as private (which is not possible right now). Sep 7, 2015 at 14:42
4

At present, macros are the only way to do this. Coherence rules prevent multiple implementations that could overlap, so you can’t use a generic solution.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.