Derive
The compiler is capable of providing basic implementations for some traits via
the #[derive]
attribute. These traits can still be
manually implemented if a more complex behavior is required.
The following is a list of derivable traits:
* Comparison traits:
Eq
, PartialEq
, Ord
, PartialOrd
.
* Clone
, to create T
from &T
via a copy.
* Copy
, to give a type 'copy semantics' instead of 'move semantics'.
* Hash
, to compute a hash from &T
.
* Default
, to create an empty instance of a data type.
* Debug
, to format a value using the {:?}
formatter.
// `Centimeters`, a tuple struct that can be compared
#[derive(PartialEq, PartialOrd)]
struct Centimeters(f64);
// `Inches`, a tuple struct that can be printed
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Inches(i32);
impl Inches {
fn to_centimeters(&self) -> Centimeters {
let &Inches(inches) = self;
Centimeters(inches as f64 * 2.54)
}
}
// `Seconds`, a tuple struct with no additional attributes
struct Seconds(i32);
fn main() {
let _one_second = Seconds(1);
// Error: `Seconds` can't be printed; it doesn't implement the `Debug` trait
//println!("One second looks like: {:?}", _one_second);
// TODO ^ Try uncommenting this line
// Error: `Seconds` can't be compared; it doesn't implement the `PartialEq` trait
//let _this_is_true = (_one_second == _one_second);
// TODO ^ Try uncommenting this line
let foot = Inches(12);
println!("One foot equals {:?}", foot);
let meter = Centimeters(100.0);
let cmp =
if foot.to_centimeters() < meter {
"smaller"
} else {
"bigger"
};
println!("One foot is {} than one meter.", cmp);
}
See also:
Last update:
2022-07-27