mucell

Crates.iomucell
lib.rsmucell
version0.3.5
sourcesrc
created_at2014-11-28 06:44:50.414414
updated_at2016-01-22 01:01:31.476751
descriptionA cell with the ability to mutate the value through an immutable reference when safe
homepage
repositoryhttps://github.com/chris-morgan/mucell
max_upload_size
id417
size38,066
Chris Morgan (chris-morgan)

documentation

README

mucell 0.3.5

Build Status

A cell with the ability to mutate the value through an immutable reference when safe.

Comparison with RefCell

RefCell goes for completely runtime checking, having try_borrow, try_borrow_mut, borrow and borrow_mut all taking &self and using custom reference types everywhere.

MuCell (out of pity and the fact that “non-ascii idents are not fully supported” I did not name it ΜCell with the crate named µcell) makes much more use of true Rust borrow checking for a result that is more efficient and has no possibility of panicking.

However, its purpose is not the same as RefCell; it is designed specifically for cases where something only needs an immutable reference, but where being able to safely take a mutable reference can improve efficiency. Say, for example, where it’s beneficial to be able to cache the result of a calculation, but you don’t really want to need to do that.

The purpose of all of this is for an accessor for a T that can be made more efficient if it can have &mut self, but doesn’t strictly require it. For this reason, it’s often going to be paired with std::borrow::Cow, e.g. Cow<str> or Cow<[T]>, producing Borrowed if you are able to mutate the value or Owned of the same data if not.

Examples

This example covers most of the surface area of the library:

# use mucell::MuCell;
let mut cell = MuCell::new(vec![1i, 2, 3]);

// You can borrow from the cell mutably at no cost.
cell.borrow_mut().push(4);

// You can borrow immutably, too, and it’s very cheap.
// (Rust’s standard borrow checking prevents you from doing
// this while there’s a mutable reference taken out.)
assert_eq!(&cell.borrow()[], &[1, 2, 3, 4][]);

// So long as there are no active borrows,
// try_mutate can be used to mutate the value.
assert!(cell.try_mutate(|x| x.push(5)));
assert_eq!(&cell.borrow()[], &[1, 2, 3, 4, 5][]);

// But when there is an immutable borrow active,
// try_mutate says no.
let b = cell.borrow();
assert!(!cell.try_mutate(|_| unreachable!()));
drop(b);

// We can have many immutable borrows at a time, too.
{
    let a = cell.borrow();
    let b = cell.borrow();
    let c = cell.borrow();
    assert_eq!(&*a as *const _, &*b as *const _);
}

// Once they’re all cleared, try_mutate is happy again.
assert!(cell.try_mutate(|x| x.push(6)));
assert_eq!(&cell.borrow()[], &[1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6][]);

Look at the examples in the repository for some slightly more practical (though still typically contrived) examples.

Usage

Cargo all the way. http://crates.io/crates/mucell

This crate can be used with #![no_std] by enabling the no_std Cargo feature.

MuCell::new can become a const fn instead of a fn on nightly by enabling the const_fn Cargo feature.

Author

Chris Morgan (chris-morgan) is the primary author and maintainer of this library.

License

This library is distributed under similar terms to Rust: dual licensed under the MIT license and the Apache license (version 2.0).

See LICENSE-APACHE, LICENSE-MIT, and COPYRIGHT for details.

Commit count: 35

cargo fmt