Trait weak_table::traits::WeakElement
[−]
[src]
pub trait WeakElement { type Strong; fn new(view: &Self::Strong) -> Self; fn view(&self) -> Option<Self::Strong>; fn is_expired(&self) -> bool { ... } fn clone(view: &Self::Strong) -> Self::Strong
where
Self: Sized, { ... } }
Interface for elements that can be stored in weak hash tables.
This trait applies to the weak version of a reference-counted pointer; it can be used to
convert a weak pointer into a strong pointer and back. For example, the impl for
std::rc::Weak<T>
defines the Strong
associated type as std::rc::Rc<T>
. Then method
new
can be used to downgrade an Rc<T>
to a Weak<T>
, and method view
can be used to
upgrade a Weak<T>
into an Rc<T>
, if it's still alive. If we think of the weak pointer as
what is stored, then the strong pointer is a temporary view of it.
Associated Types
type Strong
The type at which a weak element can be viewed.
For example, for std::rc::Weak<T>
, this will be std::rc::Rc<T>
.
Required Methods
fn new(view: &Self::Strong) -> Self
Constructs a weak pointer from a strong pointer.
This is usually implemented by a downgrade
method.
fn view(&self) -> Option<Self::Strong>
Acquires a strong pointer from a weak pointer.
This is usually implemented by an upgrade
method.
Provided Methods
fn is_expired(&self) -> bool
Is the given weak element expired?
The default implemention checks whether a strong pointer can be obtained via view
.
fn clone(view: &Self::Strong) -> Self::Strong where
Self: Sized,
Self: Sized,
Clones a strong pointer.
The default implementation uses new
and view
; you should override it.
Implementations on Foreign Types
impl<T: ?Sized> WeakElement for Weak<T>
[src]
impl<T: ?Sized> WeakElement for Weak<T>
impl<T: ?Sized> WeakElement for Weak<T>
[src]
impl<T: ?Sized> WeakElement for Weak<T>