55

I have two structs and a trait:

struct A {
    x: u32,
}

struct B {
    x: u32,
}

trait T {
    fn double(&self) -> u32;
}

I would like to implement T for both structs using x.

Is there a way to write something like

impl T for A, B {
    fn double(&self) -> u32 {
        /* ... */
    }
}

I would like to not use macros if possible.

5 Answers 5

39

Creating a macro also solves your problem:

struct A {
    x: u32,
}

struct B {
    x: u32,
}

trait T {
    fn double(&self) -> u32;
}

macro_rules! impl_T {
    (for $($t:ty),+) => {
        $(impl T for $t {
            fn double(&self) -> u32 {
                self.x * 2
            }
        })*
    }
}

impl_T!(for A, B);

fn main() {}
34

The only way to implement a trait once for many concrete types is to implement a trait for all types already implementing another trait.

For example, you can implement a marker trait Xed and then:

impl<T> Double for T
where
    T: Xed,
{
    fn double(&self) {
        /* ... */
    }
}

However, Rust has principled generics. The only thing that you know about T in the previous implementation is that T implements the Xed trait, and therefore the only associated types/functions you can use are those coming from Xed.

A trait cannot expose a field/attribute, only associated types, constants and functions, so Xed would need a getter for x (which need not be called x).

If you wish to rely on syntactic (and not semantic) properties of the code, then use macros.

7
  • 1
    The thing is, I would like to access fields in my trait implementation. Hence the problem.
    – jz87
    Commented Aug 25, 2016 at 20:00
  • @jz87: Make a getter in the Xed trait or use a macro, as mentioned. There is no support for "mapping fields" in traits to Rust (and there may never be, as getters are sufficient). Commented Aug 25, 2016 at 20:54
  • Would there be a way to maintain that getter private while the other trait methods are public?
    – eldruin
    Commented Sep 24, 2018 at 7:13
  • @eldruin: Trait methods are always public, but trait themselves can be private. To maintain the getter private you would implement either directly on the type (inherent method) or on a private trait. Commented Sep 24, 2018 at 10:01
  • 1
    For me this fails with type parameter T` must be used as the type parameter for some local type (e.g., MyStruct<T>)` (even if the Trait Xed is local to the module).
    – Florian
    Commented Jan 3, 2023 at 22:11
15

Using the duplicate_item attribute macro you can do the following:

use duplicate::duplicate_item;
#[duplicate_item(name; [A]; [B])]
impl T for name {
    fn double(&self) -> u32 {
        self.x * 2
    }
}

This will expand to two identical implementations for the two structs. I know you said you didn't want to use macros, but I interpret that as meaning you don't want to roll your own macro, so I think this is a good compromise.

You could also use duplicate_item to avoid repeating your struct definitions:

use duplicate::duplicate_item;
#[duplicate_item(name; [A]; [B])]
struct name {
    x: u32,
}

Or go all-out if you for some reason need two identical structs with identical implements (at this point we should begin questioning why we need 2 structs at all :D):

use duplicate::duplicate;
duplicate!{
    [ name; [A]; [B] ]
    pub struct name {
        x: u32,
    }
    impl T for name {
        fn double(&self) -> u32 {
            self.x * 2
        }
    }
}

Notice the use of the duplicate function-like macro this time to duplicate struct and implement at the same time.

2
  • 1
    The first code block of your answer didn't work for me. Small tweak based on the crate documentation (docs.rs/duplicate/0.2.2/duplicate): A,B should each be enclosed in their own [] square brackets. use duplicate::duplicate #[duplicate(name; [A]; [B])] impl T for name {... Commented Jun 20, 2020 at 20:33
  • This is great! Just what I needed for the thing I'm working on. :) Commented Dec 16, 2021 at 23:23
4

Since the internals of your structs are the same / share common components, you should extract them into a common struct and embed the common part back into the parent structs. The common struct would have the "complicated" implementation of the trait and then the parent struct's trait implementations would delegate to the common implementation:

trait T {
    fn double(&self) -> u32;
}

struct A {
    common: Common,
}

impl T for A {
    fn double(&self) -> u32 {
        self.common.double()
    }
}

struct B {
    common: Common,
}

impl T for B {
    fn double(&self) -> u32 {
        self.common.double()
    }
}

struct Common {
    x: u32,
}

impl T for Common {
    fn double(&self) -> u32 {
        self.x * 2
    }
}

Any nicer code will require changes to the language. Two possible paths:

0

There's this reference for doing Default Implementations.

It has the caveat that you will not use whatever is in self since we don't know what self is at this point, unless we call another method of the trait.

pub trait Summary {
    fn summarize(&self) -> String {
        String::from("(Read more...)")
    }
}

struct NewsArticle;

impl Summary for NewsArticle{}

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