This crate provides an attribute macro to make trait methods callable without the trait in scope.
toml
[dependencies]
inherent = "0.1"
```rust mod types { use inherent::inherent;
trait Trait {
fn f(self);
}
pub struct Struct;
#[inherent(pub)]
impl Trait for Struct {
fn f(self) {}
}
}
fn main() { // types::Trait is not in scope, but method can be called. types::Struct.f(); } ```
Without the inherent
macro on the trait impl, this would have failed with the
following error:
console
error[E0599]: no method named `f` found for type `types::Struct` in the current scope
--> src/main.rs:18:19
|
8 | pub struct Struct;
| ------------------ method `f` not found for this
...
18 | types::Struct.f();
| ^
|
= help: items from traits can only be used if the trait is implemented and in scope
= note: the following trait defines an item `f`, perhaps you need to implement it:
candidate #1: `types::Trait`
The inherent
macro expands to inherent methods on the Self
type of the trait
impl that forward to the trait methods. In the case above, the generated code
would be:
rust
impl Struct {
pub fn f(self) {
<Self as Trait>::f(self)
}
}
Ordinary trait methods have the same visibility as the trait or the Self
type,
whichever's is smaller. Neither of these visibilities is knowable to the
inherent
macro, so we simply emit all inherent methods as private by default.
A different visibility may be specified explicitly in the inherent
macro
invocation.
```rust
```
Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.