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//! This tiny crate should help you simplify your code when you need to wrap //! [`Iterator`] as trait-object. //! //! [`iterator`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html //! //! Imagine for example a trait like the following. //! //! ``` //! #[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)] //! enum Color { //! Red, //! Green, //! Blue, //! White, //! Black, //! } //! trait Colors<'a> { //! type ColorsIter: Iterator<Item = Color>; //! fn colors(&'a self) -> Self::ColorsIter; //! } //! ``` //! //! As an implementor, you have a `struct Flag` that looks like this. //! //! ``` //! # #[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)] //! # enum Color { Red, Green, Blue, White, Black } //! struct Flag { //! primary_colors: std::collections::HashSet<Color>, //! secondary_colors: std::collections::HashSet<Color>, //! } //! ``` //! //! you might implement a `fn colors()` that look like this //! //! ``` //! # use dyn_iter::DynIter; //! # #[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)] //! # enum Color { Red, Green, Blue, White, Black } //! # trait Colors<'a> { //! # type ColorsIter: Iterator<Item = Color>; //! # fn colors(&'a self) -> Self::ColorsIter; //! # } //! # struct Flag { //! # primary_colors: std::collections::HashSet<Color>, //! # secondary_colors: std::collections::HashSet<Color>, //! # } //! # impl<'a> Colors<'a> for Flag { //! # type ColorsIter = DynIter<'a, Color>; //! fn colors(&'a self) -> Self::ColorsIter { //! # DynIter::new( //! self.primary_colors //! .iter() //! .chain(&self.secondary_colors) //! .filter(|color| **color != Color::Black) //! .copied() //! # ) //! } //! # } //! ``` //! //! With the above implementation, defining the associated type `ColorsIter` might //! be difficult. `DynIter` should simplify your life because you can just write the //! following implementation. //! //! ``` //! # use dyn_iter::DynIter; //! # #[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)] //! # enum Color { Red, Green, Blue, White, Black } //! # trait Colors<'a> { //! # type ColorsIter: Iterator<Item = Color>; //! # fn colors(&'a self) -> Self::ColorsIter; //! # } //! # struct Flag { //! # primary_colors: std::collections::HashSet<Color>, //! # secondary_colors: std::collections::HashSet<Color>, //! # } //! impl<'a> Colors<'a> for Flag { //! type ColorsIter = DynIter<'a, Color>; //! fn colors(&'a self) -> Self::ColorsIter { //! DynIter::new( //! self.primary_colors //! .iter() //! .chain(&self.secondary_colors) //! .filter(|color| **color != Color::Black) //! .copied() //! ) //! } //! } //! ``` //! //! Behind the scene, `DynIter<'iter, V>` is only providing a wrapper around a //! `Box<dyn Iterator<Item = V> + 'iter>`. //! //! For more details about why this crate exists, read this [blog post]. //! //! [blog post]: https://hole.tuziwo.info/dyn-iterator.html #![warn( missing_docs, missing_doc_code_examples, missing_copy_implementations, missing_debug_implementations, missing_docs, rust_2018_idioms )] use std::fmt::{Debug, Formatter}; /// Iterator type that can wrap any kind of [`Iterator`]. /// /// This `struct` is a wrapper around types that implements `Iterator` /// trait. Since we do not know which specific type of `Iterator` is /// used, we `Box` it as a trait-object. /// /// This iterator yields any type which usually depends on references on the /// model. Therefore, the iterator must outlive the wrapped `Iterator`. /// /// [`Iterator`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html pub struct DynIter<'iter, V> { iter: Box<dyn Iterator<Item = V> + 'iter>, } impl<V> Debug for DynIter<'_, V> { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result { let size_str = match self.iter.size_hint() { (min, None) => format!("{}", min), (min, Some(max)) if min == max => format!("{}", min), (min, Some(max)) => format!("between {} and {}", min, max), }; write!(f, "{{ iter: [Iterator with {} elements]}}", size_str,) } } impl<'iter, V> DynIter<'iter, V> { /// Instantiates an [`DynIter`] from any kind of [`Iterator`]. /// /// [`DynIter`]: ./struct.DynIter.html /// [`Iterator`]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html pub fn new<I>(iter: I) -> Self where I: Iterator<Item = V> + 'iter, { Self { iter: Box::new(iter), } } } impl<'iter, V> Iterator for DynIter<'iter, V> { type Item = V; fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> { self.iter.next() } } #[cfg(test)] mod tests { use super::DynIter; // This test is mostly checking that everything compiles and works as // expected. #[test] fn it_compiles() { let iter = (0..5).skip(2).filter(|n| *n != 3); let mut dyn_iter = DynIter::new(iter); assert_eq!(dyn_iter.next(), Some(2)); assert_eq!(dyn_iter.next(), Some(4)); assert_eq!(dyn_iter.next(), None); } struct SizeHintIterator { min: usize, max: Option<usize>, } mod debug { use super::*; impl Iterator for SizeHintIterator { type Item = u8; fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item> { Some(1) } fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) { (self.min, self.max) } } #[test] fn no_max_size_hint() { let iter = SizeHintIterator { min: 2, max: None }; let dyn_iter = DynIter::new(iter); let debug_msg = format!("{:?}", dyn_iter); assert_eq!("{ iter: [Iterator with 2 elements]}", debug_msg); } #[test] fn equal_min_max_size_hint() { let iter = SizeHintIterator { min: 3, max: Some(3), }; let dyn_iter = DynIter::new(iter); let debug_msg = format!("{:?}", dyn_iter); assert_eq!("{ iter: [Iterator with 3 elements]}", debug_msg); } #[test] fn different_min_max_size_hint() { let iter = SizeHintIterator { min: 4, max: Some(5), }; let dyn_iter = DynIter::new(iter); let debug_msg = format!("{:?}", dyn_iter); assert_eq!( "{ iter: [Iterator with between 4 and 5 elements]}", debug_msg ); } } }