Trait core::marker::Copy
[−]
[src]
pub trait Copy: Clone { }
Types that can be copied by simply copying bits (i.e. memcpy
).
By default, variable bindings have 'move semantics.' In other words:
fn main() { #[derive(Debug)] struct Foo; let x = Foo; let y = x; // `x` has moved into `y`, and so cannot be used // println!("{:?}", x); // error: use of moved value }#[derive(Debug)] struct Foo; let x = Foo; let y = x; // `x` has moved into `y`, and so cannot be used // println!("{:?}", x); // error: use of moved value
However, if a type implements Copy
, it instead has 'copy semantics':
// we can just derive a `Copy` implementation #[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone)] struct Foo; let x = Foo; let y = x; // `y` is a copy of `x` println!("{:?}", x); // A-OK!
It's important to note that in these two examples, the only difference is if you are allowed to
access x
after the assignment: a move is also a bitwise copy under the hood.
When can my type be Copy
?
A type can implement Copy
if all of its components implement Copy
. For example, this
struct
can be Copy
:
struct Point { x: i32, y: i32, }
A struct
can be Copy
, and i32
is Copy
, so therefore, Point
is eligible to be Copy
.
struct PointList { points: Vec<Point>, }
The PointList
struct
cannot implement Copy
, because Vec<T>
is not Copy
. If we
attempt to derive a Copy
implementation, we'll get an error:
the trait `Copy` may not be implemented for this type; field `points` does not implement `Copy`
How can I implement Copy
?
There are two ways to implement Copy
on your type:
#[derive(Copy, Clone)] struct MyStruct;
and
fn main() { struct MyStruct; impl Copy for MyStruct {} impl Clone for MyStruct { fn clone(&self) -> MyStruct { *self } } }struct MyStruct; impl Copy for MyStruct {} impl Clone for MyStruct { fn clone(&self) -> MyStruct { *self } }
There is a small difference between the two: the derive
strategy will also place a Copy
bound on type parameters, which isn't always desired.
When can my type not be Copy
?
Some types can't be copied safely. For example, copying &mut T
would create an aliased
mutable reference, and copying String
would result in two attempts to free the same buffer.
Generalizing the latter case, any type implementing Drop
can't be Copy
, because it's
managing some resource besides its own size_of::<T>()
bytes.
When should my type be Copy
?
Generally speaking, if your type can implement Copy
, it should. There's one important thing
to consider though: if you think your type may not be able to implement Copy
in the future,
then it might be prudent to not implement Copy
. This is because removing Copy
is a breaking
change: that second example would fail to compile if we made Foo
non-Copy
.
Derivable
This trait can be used with #[derive]
.
Implementors
impl Copy for Decoded
impl Copy for FullDecoded
impl<'a> Copy for Part<'a>
impl Copy for Sign
impl Copy for Unpacked
impl Copy for Fp
impl<T: Copy> Copy for Wrapping<T>
impl Copy for FpCategory
impl<T: Copy + Zeroable> Copy for NonZero<T>
impl<T: ?Sized> Copy for Shared<T>
impl<T: ?Sized> Copy for PhantomData<T>
impl Copy for RangeFull
impl<Idx: Copy> Copy for RangeTo<Idx>
impl Copy for Ordering
impl Copy for TypeId
impl Copy for Ordering
impl Copy for BorrowState
impl<T: Copy> Copy for Option<T>
impl<T> Copy for Slice<T>
impl Copy for TraitObject
impl<T: Copy, E: Copy> Copy for Result<T, E>
impl Copy for SearchStep
impl Copy for Utf8Error
impl Copy for CharRange
impl Copy for Radix
impl<T: Copy, R: Copy> Copy for RadixFmt<T, R>
impl Copy for Argument
impl Copy for FormatSpec
impl Copy for Alignment
impl Copy for Count
impl Copy for Position
impl Copy for Error
impl<'a> Copy for ArgumentV1<'a>
impl Copy for FlagV1
impl<'a> Copy for Arguments<'a>