0db3932433
Elaborate on deriving vs implementing `Copy` I was reading this documentation and this wasn't immediately clear to me. In my mind, it seemed obvious that a type can only claim to be `Copy` if the bits it is storing can be `Copy`, and in the case of a generic struct that can only be the case if `T: Copy`. So the bound added by the derive seemed necessary at all times, and I thought what the documentation was trying to say is that the custom implementation allows you to add _additional bounds_. Of course what it was actually trying to point out is that just because you have a generic parameter `T`, it doesn't necessarily mean you are storing the bits of `T`. And if you aren't, it may be the case that your own bits can be copied regardless of whether the bits of `T` can be safely copied. Thought it may be worth elaborating to make that a bit more clear. Haven't tested/didn't try to figure out how to render this locally. Mainly not sure if the `PhantomData` back link is going to just work or need some extra stuff, but I figured someone else probably could just tell. |
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alloc | ||
backtrace@230570f2da | ||
core | ||
panic_abort | ||
panic_unwind | ||
portable-simd | ||
proc_macro | ||
profiler_builtins | ||
rtstartup | ||
rustc-std-workspace-alloc | ||
rustc-std-workspace-core | ||
rustc-std-workspace-std | ||
std | ||
stdarch@d9466edb4c | ||
sysroot | ||
test | ||
unwind | ||
windows_targets | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml |