# Dynamize In order to turn a trait into a [trait object] the trait must be [object-safe] and the values of all [associated types] must be specified. Sometimes you however want a trait object to be able to encompass trait implementations with different associated type values. This crate provides a procedural macro to achieve that. [trait object]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch17-02-trait-objects.html [object-safe]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/items/traits.html#object-safety [associated types]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch19-03-advanced-traits.html The following code illustrates a scenario where dynamize can help you: ```rust ignore trait Client { type Error; fn get(&self, url: String) -> Result, Self::Error>; } impl Client for HttpClient { type Error = HttpError; ...} impl Client for FtpClient { type Error = FtpError; ...} let client: HttpClient = ...; let object = &client as &dyn Client; ``` The last line of the above code fails to compile with: > error\[E0191\]: the value of the associated type `Error` (from trait `Client`) > must be specified To use dynamize you only have to make some small changes: ```rust ignore #[dynamize::dynamize] trait Client { type Error: Into; fn get(&self, url: String) -> Result, Self::Error>; } ``` 1. You add the `#[dynamize::dynamize]` attribute to your trait. 2. You specify a trait bound for each associated type. Dynamize defines a new trait for you, named after your trait but with the `Dyn` prefix, so e.g. `Client` becomes `DynClient`: ```rust ignore let client: HttpClient = ...; let object = &client as &dyn DynClient; ``` The new "dynamized" trait can then be used without having to specify the associated type value. ## How does this work? For the above example dynamize generates the following code: ```rust ignore trait DynClient { fn get(&self, url: String) -> Result, SuperError>; } impl<__to_be_dynamized: Client> DynClient for __to_be_dynamized { fn get(&self, url: String) -> Result, SuperError> { Client::get(self, url).map_err(|x| x.into()) } } ``` As you can see in the dynamized trait the associated type was replaced with the destination type of the `Into` bound. The magic however happens afterwards: dynamize generates a blanket implementation: each type implementing `Client` automatically also implements `DynClient`! ## How does this actually work? The destination type of an associated type is determined by looking at its trait bounds: * if the first trait bound is `Into` the destination type is `T` * otherwise the destination type is the boxed trait object of all trait bounds e.g. `Error + Send` becomes `Box` (for this the first trait bound needs to be object-safe) Dynamize can convert associated types in: * return types, e.g. `fn example(&self) -> Self::A` * callback parameters, e.g. `fn example(&self, f: F)` Dynamize also understands if you wrap associated types in the following types: * tuples * `Option<_>` * `Result<_, _>` * `some::module::Result<_>` (type alias with fixed error type) * `&mut dyn Iterator` * `Vec<_>`, `VecDeque<_>`, `LinkedList<_>`, `HashSet`, `BinaryHeap`, `BTreeSet`, `HashMap`, `BTreeMap` (for `K` only `Into`-bounded associated types work because they require `Eq`) Note that since these are resolved recursively you can actually nest these arbitrarily so e.g. the following also just works: ```rust ignore fn example(&self) -> Result, Self::Error>; ``` ## How does dynamize deal with method generics? In order to be object-safe methods must not have generics, so dynamize simply moves them to the trait definition. For the following source code: ```rust #[dynamize::dynamize] trait Gen { type Result: std::fmt::Display; fn foo(&self, a: A) -> Self::Result; fn bar(&self, a: A, b: B) -> Self::Result; fn buz(&self) -> Self::Result; } ``` dynamize generates the following trait: ```rust trait DynGen { fn foo(&self, a: A) -> Box; fn bar(&self, a: A, b: B) -> Box; fn buz(&self) -> Box; } ``` If two method type parameters have the same name, dynamize enforces that they also have the same bounds and only adds the parameter once to the trait. Note that in the dynamized trait calling the `buz` method now requires you to specify both generic types, even though they aren't actually required by the method. You can avoid this by splitting the original trait in two, i.e. moving the `buz` method to a separate trait, which can be dynamized separately. ## Dynamize supports async Dynamize supports async out of the box. Since Rust however does not yet support async functions in traits, you'll have to additionally use another library like [async-trait](https://crates.io/crates/async-trait), for example: ```rust ignore #[dynamize::dynamize] #[dyn_trait_attr(async_trait)] #[blanket_impl_attr(async_trait)] #[async_trait] trait Client: Sync { type Error: std::error::Error + Send; async fn get(&self, url: String) -> Result, Self::Error>; } ``` * `#[dyn_trait_attr(foo)]` attaches `#[foo]` to the dynamized trait * `#[blanket_impl_attr(foo)]` attaches `#[foo]` to the blanket implementation Note that it is important that the `#[dynamize]` attribute comes before the `#[async_trait]` attribute, since dynamize must run before async_trait. ## Dynamized supertraits In Rust a macro only operates on the passed input; it does not have access to the surrounding source code. This also means that a `#[dynamize]` macro cannot know which other traits have been dynamized. When you want to dynamize a trait with a dynamized supertrait, you have to tell dynamize about it with the `#[dynamized(...)]` attribute: ```rust ignore #[dynamize::dynamize] trait Client { type Error: Into; fn get(&self, url: String) -> Result, Self::Error>; } #[dynamize::dynamize] #[dynamized(Client)] trait ClientWithCache: Client { type Error: Into; fn get_with_cache( &self, url: String, cache: C, ) -> Result, ::Error>; } ``` This results in `DynClientWithCache` having the dynamized `DynClient` supertrait. With the above code both traits have independent associated types. So a trait could implement one trait with one `Error` type and and the other trait with another `Error` type. If you don't want that to be possible you can change the second trait to: ```rust ignore #[dynamize::dynamize] #[dynamized(Client)] #[convert = |x: ::Error| -> SuperError {x.into()}] trait ClientWithCache: Client { fn get_with_cache( &self, url: String, cache: C, ) -> Result, ::Error>; } ``` Note that we removed the associated type and are now using the associated type from the supertrait by qualifying `Self as Client`. Since the `#[dynamize]` attribute on the `ClientWithCache` trait however cannot know the associated type from another trait, we also need to add a `#[convert = ...]` attribute to tell dynamize how to convert `::Error>`. ## Using dynamize with other collections Dynamize automatically recognizes collections from the standard library like `Vec<_>` and `HashMap<_, _>`. Dynamize can also work with other collection types as long as they implement `IntoIterator` and `FromIterator`, for example dynamize can be used with [indexmap](https://crates.io/crates/indexmap) as follows: ```rust ignore #[dynamize::dynamize] #[collection(IndexMap, 2)] trait Trait { type A: Into; type B: Into; fn example(&self) -> IndexMap; } ``` The passed number tells dynamize how many generic type parameters to expect. * for 1 dynamize expects: `Type: IntoIterator + FromIterator` * for 2 dynamize expects: `Type: IntoIterator + FromIterator<(A,B)>` * for 3 dynamize expects: `Type: IntoIterator + FromIterator<(A,B,C)>` * etc ...