Advanced Traits
We first covered traits in the “Traits: Defining Shared Behavior” section of Chapter 10, but we didn’t discuss the more advanced details. Now that you know more about Rust, we can get into the nitty-gritty.
Specifying Placeholder Types in Trait Definitions with Associated Types
Associated types connect a type placeholder with a trait such that the trait method definitions can use these placeholder types in their signatures. The implementor of a trait will specify the concrete type to be used instead of the placeholder type for the particular implementation. That way, we can define a trait that uses some types without needing to know exactly what those types are until the trait is implemented.
We’ve described most of the advanced features in this chapter as being rarely needed. Associated types are somewhere in the middle: they’re used more rarely than features explained in the rest of the book but more commonly than many of the other features discussed in this chapter.
One example of a trait with an associated type is the Iterator
trait that the
standard library provides. The associated type is named Item
and stands in
for the type of the values the type implementing the Iterator
trait is
iterating over. The definition of the Iterator
trait is as shown in Listing
19-12.
pub trait Iterator {
type Item;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item>;
}
The type Item
is a placeholder, and the next
method’s definition shows that
it will return values of type Option<Self::Item>
. Implementors of the
Iterator
trait will specify the concrete type for Item
, and the next
method will return an Option
containing a value of that concrete type.
Associated types might seem like a similar concept to generics, in that the
latter allow us to define a function without specifying what types it can
handle. To examine the difference between the two concepts, we’ll look at an
implementation of the Iterator
trait on a type named Counter
that specifies
the Item
type is u32
:
Filename: src/lib.rs
struct Counter {
count: u32,
}
impl Counter {
fn new() -> Counter {
Counter { count: 0 }
}
}
impl Iterator for Counter {
type Item = u32;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> {
// --snip--
if self.count < 5 {
self.count += 1;
Some(self.count)
} else {
None
}
}
}
This syntax seems comparable to that of generics. So why not just define the
Iterator
trait with generics, as shown in Listing 19-13?
pub trait Iterator<T> {
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<T>;
}
The difference is that when using generics, as in Listing 19-13, we must
annotate the types in each implementation; because we can also implement
Iterator<String> for Counter
or any other type, we could have multiple
implementations of Iterator
for Counter
. In other words, when a trait has a
generic parameter, it can be implemented for a type multiple times, changing
the concrete types of the generic type parameters each time. When we use the
next
method on Counter
, we would have to provide type annotations to
indicate which implementation of Iterator
we want to use.
With associated types, we don’t need to annotate types because we can’t
implement a trait on a type multiple times. In Listing 19-12 with the
definition that uses associated types, we can only choose what the type of
Item
will be once, because there can only be one impl Iterator for Counter
.
We don’t have to specify that we want an iterator of u32
values everywhere
that we call next
on Counter
.
Associated types also become part of the trait’s contract: implementors of the trait must provide a type to stand in for the associated type placeholder. Associated types often have a name that describes how the type will be used, and documenting the associated type in the API documentation is good practice.
Default Generic Type Parameters and Operator Overloading
When we use generic type parameters, we can specify a default concrete type for
the generic type. This eliminates the need for implementors of the trait to
specify a concrete type if the default type works. You specify a default type
when declaring a generic type with the <PlaceholderType=ConcreteType>
syntax.
A great example of a situation where this technique is useful is with operator
overloading, in which you customize the behavior of an operator (such as +
)
in particular situations.
Rust doesn’t allow you to create your own operators or overload arbitrary
operators. But you can overload the operations and corresponding traits listed
in std::ops
by implementing the traits associated with the operator. For
example, in Listing 19-14 we overload the +
operator to add two Point
instances together. We do this by implementing the Add
trait on a Point
struct:
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::ops::Add; #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone, PartialEq)] struct Point { x: i32, y: i32, } impl Add for Point { type Output = Point; fn add(self, other: Point) -> Point { Point { x: self.x + other.x, y: self.y + other.y, } } } fn main() { assert_eq!( Point { x: 1, y: 0 } + Point { x: 2, y: 3 }, Point { x: 3, y: 3 } ); }
The add
method adds the x
values of two Point
instances and the y
values of two Point
instances to create a new Point
. The Add
trait has an
associated type named Output
that determines the type returned from the add
method.
The default generic type in this code is within the Add
trait. Here is its
definition:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { trait Add<Rhs=Self> { type Output; fn add(self, rhs: Rhs) -> Self::Output; } }
This code should look generally familiar: a trait with one method and an
associated type. The new part is Rhs=Self
: this syntax is called default
type parameters. The Rhs
generic type parameter (short for “right hand
side”) defines the type of the rhs
parameter in the add
method. If we don’t
specify a concrete type for Rhs
when we implement the Add
trait, the type
of Rhs
will default to Self
, which will be the type we’re implementing
Add
on.
When we implemented Add
for Point
, we used the default for Rhs
because we
wanted to add two Point
instances. Let’s look at an example of implementing
the Add
trait where we want to customize the Rhs
type rather than using the
default.
We have two structs, Millimeters
and Meters
, holding values in different
units. This thin wrapping of an existing type in another struct is known as the
newtype pattern, which we describe in more detail in the “Using the Newtype
Pattern to Implement External Traits on External Types” section. We want to add values in millimeters to values in meters and have
the implementation of Add
do the conversion correctly. We can implement Add
for Millimeters
with Meters
as the Rhs
, as shown in Listing 19-15.
Filename: src/lib.rs
use std::ops::Add;
struct Millimeters(u32);
struct Meters(u32);
impl Add<Meters> for Millimeters {
type Output = Millimeters;
fn add(self, other: Meters) -> Millimeters {
Millimeters(self.0 + (other.0 * 1000))
}
}
To add Millimeters
and Meters
, we specify impl Add<Meters>
to set the
value of the Rhs
type parameter instead of using the default of Self
.
You’ll use default type parameters in two main ways:
- To extend a type without breaking existing code
- To allow customization in specific cases most users won’t need
The standard library’s Add
trait is an example of the second purpose:
usually, you’ll add two like types, but the Add
trait provides the ability to
customize beyond that. Using a default type parameter in the Add
trait
definition means you don’t have to specify the extra parameter most of the
time. In other words, a bit of implementation boilerplate isn’t needed, making
it easier to use the trait.
The first purpose is similar to the second but in reverse: if you want to add a type parameter to an existing trait, you can give it a default to allow extension of the functionality of the trait without breaking the existing implementation code.
Fully Qualified Syntax for Disambiguation: Calling Methods with the Same Name
Nothing in Rust prevents a trait from having a method with the same name as another trait’s method, nor does Rust prevent you from implementing both traits on one type. It’s also possible to implement a method directly on the type with the same name as methods from traits.
When calling methods with the same name, you’ll need to tell Rust which one you
want to use. Consider the code in Listing 19-16 where we’ve defined two traits,
Pilot
and Wizard
, that both have a method called fly
. We then implement
both traits on a type Human
that already has a method named fly
implemented
on it. Each fly
method does something different.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Pilot { fn fly(&self); } trait Wizard { fn fly(&self); } struct Human; impl Pilot for Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("This is your captain speaking."); } } impl Wizard for Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("Up!"); } } impl Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("*waving arms furiously*"); } } fn main() {}
When we call fly
on an instance of Human
, the compiler defaults to calling
the method that is directly implemented on the type, as shown in Listing 19-17.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Pilot { fn fly(&self); } trait Wizard { fn fly(&self); } struct Human; impl Pilot for Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("This is your captain speaking."); } } impl Wizard for Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("Up!"); } } impl Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("*waving arms furiously*"); } } fn main() { let person = Human; person.fly(); }
Running this code will print *waving arms furiously*
, showing that Rust
called the fly
method implemented on Human
directly.
To call the fly
methods from either the Pilot
trait or the Wizard
trait,
we need to use more explicit syntax to specify which fly
method we mean.
Listing 19-18 demonstrates this syntax.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Pilot { fn fly(&self); } trait Wizard { fn fly(&self); } struct Human; impl Pilot for Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("This is your captain speaking."); } } impl Wizard for Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("Up!"); } } impl Human { fn fly(&self) { println!("*waving arms furiously*"); } } fn main() { let person = Human; Pilot::fly(&person); Wizard::fly(&person); person.fly(); }
Specifying the trait name before the method name clarifies to Rust which
implementation of fly
we want to call. We could also write
Human::fly(&person)
, which is equivalent to the person.fly()
that we used
in Listing 19-18, but this is a bit longer to write if we don’t need to
disambiguate.
Running this code prints the following:
$ cargo run
Compiling traits-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/traits-example)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.46s
Running `target/debug/traits-example`
This is your captain speaking.
Up!
*waving arms furiously*
Because the fly
method takes a self
parameter, if we had two types that
both implement one trait, Rust could figure out which implementation of a
trait to use based on the type of self
.
However, associated functions that are not methods don’t have a self
parameter. When there are multiple types or traits that define non-method
functions with the same function name, Rust doesn't always know which type you
mean unless you use fully qualified syntax. For example, in Listing 19-19 we
create a trait for an animal shelter that wants to name all baby dogs Spot.
We make an Animal
trait with an associated non-method function baby_name
.
The Animal
trait is implemented for the struct Dog
, on which we also
provide an associated non-method function baby_name
directly.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Animal { fn baby_name() -> String; } struct Dog; impl Dog { fn baby_name() -> String { String::from("Spot") } } impl Animal for Dog { fn baby_name() -> String { String::from("puppy") } } fn main() { println!("A baby dog is called a {}", Dog::baby_name()); }
We implement the code for naming all puppies Spot in the baby_name
associated
function that is defined on Dog
. The Dog
type also implements the trait
Animal
, which describes characteristics that all animals have. Baby dogs are
called puppies, and that is expressed in the implementation of the Animal
trait on Dog
in the baby_name
function associated with the Animal
trait.
In main
, we call the Dog::baby_name
function, which calls the associated
function defined on Dog
directly. This code prints the following:
$ cargo run
Compiling traits-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/traits-example)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.54s
Running `target/debug/traits-example`
A baby dog is called a Spot
This output isn’t what we wanted. We want to call the baby_name
function that
is part of the Animal
trait that we implemented on Dog
so the code prints
A baby dog is called a puppy
. The technique of specifying the trait name that
we used in Listing 19-18 doesn’t help here; if we change main
to the code in
Listing 19-20, we’ll get a compilation error.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Animal {
fn baby_name() -> String;
}
struct Dog;
impl Dog {
fn baby_name() -> String {
String::from("Spot")
}
}
impl Animal for Dog {
fn baby_name() -> String {
String::from("puppy")
}
}
fn main() {
println!("A baby dog is called a {}", Animal::baby_name());
}
Because Animal::baby_name
doesn’t have a self
parameter, and there could be
other types that implement the Animal
trait, Rust can’t figure out which
implementation of Animal::baby_name
we want. We’ll get this compiler error:
$ cargo run
Compiling traits-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/traits-example)
error[E0790]: cannot call associated function on trait without specifying the corresponding `impl` type
--> src/main.rs:20:43
|
2 | fn baby_name() -> String;
| ------------------------- `Animal::baby_name` defined here
...
20 | println!("A baby dog is called a {}", Animal::baby_name());
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ cannot call associated function of trait
|
help: use the fully-qualified path to the only available implementation
|
20 | println!("A baby dog is called a {}", <Dog as Animal>::baby_name());
| +++++++ +
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0790`.
error: could not compile `traits-example` (bin "traits-example") due to 1 previous error
To disambiguate and tell Rust that we want to use the implementation of
Animal
for Dog
as opposed to the implementation of Animal
for some other
type, we need to use fully qualified syntax. Listing 19-21 demonstrates how to
use fully qualified syntax.
Filename: src/main.rs
trait Animal { fn baby_name() -> String; } struct Dog; impl Dog { fn baby_name() -> String { String::from("Spot") } } impl Animal for Dog { fn baby_name() -> String { String::from("puppy") } } fn main() { println!("A baby dog is called a {}", <Dog as Animal>::baby_name()); }
We’re providing Rust with a type annotation within the angle brackets, which
indicates we want to call the baby_name
method from the Animal
trait as
implemented on Dog
by saying that we want to treat the Dog
type as an
Animal
for this function call. This code will now print what we want:
$ cargo run
Compiling traits-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/traits-example)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.48s
Running `target/debug/traits-example`
A baby dog is called a puppy
In general, fully qualified syntax is defined as follows:
<Type as Trait>::function(receiver_if_method, next_arg, ...);
For associated functions that aren’t methods, there would not be a receiver
:
there would only be the list of other arguments. You could use fully qualified
syntax everywhere that you call functions or methods. However, you’re allowed
to omit any part of this syntax that Rust can figure out from other information
in the program. You only need to use this more verbose syntax in cases where
there are multiple implementations that use the same name and Rust needs help
to identify which implementation you want to call.
Using Supertraits to Require One Trait’s Functionality Within Another Trait
Sometimes, you might write a trait definition that depends on another trait: for a type to implement the first trait, you want to require that type to also implement the second trait. You would do this so that your trait definition can make use of the associated items of the second trait. The trait your trait definition is relying on is called a supertrait of your trait.
For example, let’s say we want to make an OutlinePrint
trait with an
outline_print
method that will print a given value formatted so that it's
framed in asterisks. That is, given a Point
struct that implements the
standard library trait Display
to result in (x, y)
, when we call
outline_print
on a Point
instance that has 1
for x
and 3
for y
, it
should print the following:
**********
* *
* (1, 3) *
* *
**********
In the implementation of the outline_print
method, we want to use the
Display
trait’s functionality. Therefore, we need to specify that the
OutlinePrint
trait will work only for types that also implement Display
and
provide the functionality that OutlinePrint
needs. We can do that in the
trait definition by specifying OutlinePrint: Display
. This technique is
similar to adding a trait bound to the trait. Listing 19-22 shows an
implementation of the OutlinePrint
trait.
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::fmt; trait OutlinePrint: fmt::Display { fn outline_print(&self) { let output = self.to_string(); let len = output.len(); println!("{}", "*".repeat(len + 4)); println!("*{}*", " ".repeat(len + 2)); println!("* {} *", output); println!("*{}*", " ".repeat(len + 2)); println!("{}", "*".repeat(len + 4)); } } fn main() {}
Because we’ve specified that OutlinePrint
requires the Display
trait, we
can use the to_string
function that is automatically implemented for any type
that implements Display
. If we tried to use to_string
without adding a
colon and specifying the Display
trait after the trait name, we’d get an
error saying that no method named to_string
was found for the type &Self
in
the current scope.
Let’s see what happens when we try to implement OutlinePrint
on a type that
doesn’t implement Display
, such as the Point
struct:
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::fmt;
trait OutlinePrint: fmt::Display {
fn outline_print(&self) {
let output = self.to_string();
let len = output.len();
println!("{}", "*".repeat(len + 4));
println!("*{}*", " ".repeat(len + 2));
println!("* {} *", output);
println!("*{}*", " ".repeat(len + 2));
println!("{}", "*".repeat(len + 4));
}
}
struct Point {
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
impl OutlinePrint for Point {}
fn main() {
let p = Point { x: 1, y: 3 };
p.outline_print();
}
We get an error saying that Display
is required but not implemented:
$ cargo run
Compiling traits-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/traits-example)
error[E0277]: `Point` doesn't implement `std::fmt::Display`
--> src/main.rs:20:23
|
20 | impl OutlinePrint for Point {}
| ^^^^^ `Point` cannot be formatted with the default formatter
|
= help: the trait `std::fmt::Display` is not implemented for `Point`
= note: in format strings you may be able to use `{:?}` (or {:#?} for pretty-print) instead
note: required by a bound in `OutlinePrint`
--> src/main.rs:3:21
|
3 | trait OutlinePrint: fmt::Display {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `OutlinePrint`
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0277`.
error: could not compile `traits-example` (bin "traits-example") due to 1 previous error
To fix this, we implement Display
on Point
and satisfy the constraint that
OutlinePrint
requires, like so:
Filename: src/main.rs
trait OutlinePrint: fmt::Display { fn outline_print(&self) { let output = self.to_string(); let len = output.len(); println!("{}", "*".repeat(len + 4)); println!("*{}*", " ".repeat(len + 2)); println!("* {} *", output); println!("*{}*", " ".repeat(len + 2)); println!("{}", "*".repeat(len + 4)); } } struct Point { x: i32, y: i32, } impl OutlinePrint for Point {} use std::fmt; impl fmt::Display for Point { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { write!(f, "({}, {})", self.x, self.y) } } fn main() { let p = Point { x: 1, y: 3 }; p.outline_print(); }
Then implementing the OutlinePrint
trait on Point
will compile
successfully, and we can call outline_print
on a Point
instance to display
it within an outline of asterisks.
Using the Newtype Pattern to Implement External Traits on External Types
In Chapter 10 in the “Implementing a Trait on a Type” section, we mentioned the orphan rule that states we’re only allowed to implement a trait on a type if either the trait or the type are local to our crate. It’s possible to get around this restriction using the newtype pattern, which involves creating a new type in a tuple struct. (We covered tuple structs in the “Using Tuple Structs without Named Fields to Create Different Types” section of Chapter 5.) The tuple struct will have one field and be a thin wrapper around the type we want to implement a trait for. Then the wrapper type is local to our crate, and we can implement the trait on the wrapper. Newtype is a term that originates from the Haskell programming language. There is no runtime performance penalty for using this pattern, and the wrapper type is elided at compile time.
As an example, let’s say we want to implement Display
on Vec<T>
, which the
orphan rule prevents us from doing directly because the Display
trait and the
Vec<T>
type are defined outside our crate. We can make a Wrapper
struct
that holds an instance of Vec<T>
; then we can implement Display
on
Wrapper
and use the Vec<T>
value, as shown in Listing 19-23.
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::fmt; struct Wrapper(Vec<String>); impl fmt::Display for Wrapper { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { write!(f, "[{}]", self.0.join(", ")) } } fn main() { let w = Wrapper(vec![String::from("hello"), String::from("world")]); println!("w = {}", w); }
The implementation of Display
uses self.0
to access the inner Vec<T>
,
because Wrapper
is a tuple struct and Vec<T>
is the item at index 0 in the
tuple. Then we can use the functionality of the Display
type on Wrapper
.
The downside of using this technique is that Wrapper
is a new type, so it
doesn’t have the methods of the value it’s holding. We would have to implement
all the methods of Vec<T>
directly on Wrapper
such that the methods
delegate to self.0
, which would allow us to treat Wrapper
exactly like a
Vec<T>
. If we wanted the new type to have every method the inner type has,
implementing the Deref
trait (discussed in Chapter 15 in the “Treating Smart
Pointers Like Regular References with the Deref
Trait” section) on the Wrapper
to return
the inner type would be a solution. If we don’t want the Wrapper
type to have
all the methods of the inner type—for example, to restrict the Wrapper
type’s
behavior—we would have to implement just the methods we do want manually.
This newtype pattern is also useful even when traits are not involved. Let’s switch focus and look at some advanced ways to interact with Rust’s type system.