Crate trait_guard

Crate trait_guard 

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§trait_guard

trait_guard is a macro used to protect a trait implementation from usage with a custom message, note, and label.

It abuses the on_unimplemented attribute to provide a custom error message when the trait is not implemented. It requires the negative_impls and trivial_bounds nightly features to be enabled.

You can use any trait (even if it’s an STD trait or from another crate)!

§Example usage:

trait_guard!(
    MyType, // the type that will be guarded
    MyTrait, // the trait that is being guarded
 
    trait_guard = MyGuardTrait, // optional: custom name for the guard trait, shown in the diagnostic message
    guard_struct = MyGuardStruct, // optional: custom name for the guard struct, shown in the diagnostic message
 
    {
        // this is the body of the trait implementation
        fn my_method(&self) {
            // implementation
        }
    },
 
    message = "MyType does not implement MyTrait",
//  note = "This is a custom note",
//  label = "MyType needs to implement MyTrait"
);

The example above will refuse to compile if the MyTrait implementation of MyType is used anywhere in the user’s code.

If you want to guard multiple traits/types, you can change the name of trait_guard and guard_struct to avoid conflicts.

§Example for std::fmt::Display

use trait_guard::trait_guard;
 
#[derive(Debug)]
struct A;
 
trait_guard!(
    A, // the type that will be guarded
    std::fmt::Display, // the trait that is being guarded
 
    {
       // this is the body of the trait implementation
       fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> std::fmt::Result {
           unreachable!("It will never be called because A does not implement Display");
       }
    },
 
    message = "A does not implement std::fmt::Display",
);

Macros§

trait_guard
A macro to protect a trait implementation from usage with a custom message, note, and label.