// Copyright 2012-2013 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license // , at your // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed // except according to those terms. //! The `Clone` trait for types that cannot be 'implicitly copied'. //! //! In Rust, some simple types are "implicitly copyable" and when you //! assign them or pass them as arguments, the receiver will get a copy, //! leaving the original value in place. These types do not require //! allocation to copy and do not have finalizers (i.e. they do not //! contain owned boxes or implement `Drop`), so the compiler considers //! them cheap and safe to copy. For other types copies must be made //! explicitly, by convention implementing the `Clone` trait and calling //! the `clone` method. //! //! Basic usage example: //! //! ``` //! let s = String::new(); // String type implements Clone //! let copy = s.clone(); // so we can clone it //! ``` //! //! To easily implement the Clone trait, you can also use //! `#[derive(Clone)]`. Example: //! //! ``` //! #[derive(Clone)] // we add the Clone trait to Morpheus struct //! struct Morpheus { //! blue_pill: f32, //! red_pill: i64, //! } //! //! fn main() { //! let f = Morpheus { blue_pill: 0.0, red_pill: 0 }; //! let copy = f.clone(); // and now we can clone it! //! } //! ``` #![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] use marker::Sized; /// A common trait for the ability to explicitly duplicate an object. /// /// Differs from `Copy` in that `Copy` is implicit and extremely inexpensive, while /// `Clone` is always explicit and may or may not be expensive. In order to enforce /// these characteristics, Rust does not allow you to reimplement `Copy`, but you /// may reimplement `Clone` and run arbitrary code. /// /// Since `Clone` is more general than `Copy`, you can automatically make anything /// `Copy` be `Clone` as well. /// /// ## Derivable /// /// This trait can be used with `#[derive]` if all fields are `Clone`. The `derive`d /// implementation of `clone()` calls `clone()` on each field. /// /// ## How can I implement `Clone`? /// /// Types that are `Copy` should have a trivial implementation of `Clone`. More formally: /// if `T: Copy`, `x: T`, and `y: &T`, then `let x = y.clone();` is equivalent to `let x = *y;`. /// Manual implementations should be careful to uphold this invariant; however, unsafe code /// must not rely on it to ensure memory safety. /// /// An example is an array holding more than 32 elements of a type that is `Clone`; the standard /// library only implements `Clone` up until arrays of size 32. In this case, the implementation of /// `Clone` cannot be `derive`d, but can be implemented as: /// /// ``` /// #[derive(Copy)] /// struct Stats { /// frequencies: [i32; 100], /// } /// /// impl Clone for Stats { /// fn clone(&self) -> Stats { *self } /// } /// ``` #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] pub trait Clone : Sized { /// Returns a copy of the value. /// /// # Examples /// /// ``` /// let hello = "Hello"; // &str implements Clone /// /// assert_eq!("Hello", hello.clone()); /// ``` #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] fn clone(&self) -> Self; /// Performs copy-assignment from `source`. /// /// `a.clone_from(&b)` is equivalent to `a = b.clone()` in functionality, /// but can be overridden to reuse the resources of `a` to avoid unnecessary /// allocations. #[inline(always)] #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self) { *self = source.clone() } } // FIXME(aburka): this method is used solely by #[derive] to // assert that every component of a type implements Clone. // // This should never be called by user code. #[doc(hidden)] #[inline(always)] #[unstable(feature = "derive_clone_copy", reason = "deriving hack, should not be public", issue = "0")] pub fn assert_receiver_is_clone(_: &T) {} #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] impl<'a, T: ?Sized> Clone for &'a T { /// Returns a shallow copy of the reference. #[inline] fn clone(&self) -> &'a T { *self } } macro_rules! clone_impl { ($t:ty) => { #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] impl Clone for $t { /// Returns a deep copy of the value. #[inline] fn clone(&self) -> $t { *self } } } } clone_impl! { isize } clone_impl! { i8 } clone_impl! { i16 } clone_impl! { i32 } clone_impl! { i64 } clone_impl! { usize } clone_impl! { u8 } clone_impl! { u16 } clone_impl! { u32 } clone_impl! { u64 } clone_impl! { f32 } clone_impl! { f64 } clone_impl! { () } clone_impl! { bool } clone_impl! { char }