Ah, I think I see. I was expecting that after the deref trait lands, that a
type like Gc would transparently implement all of the traits that T
implemented. I guess that is not the case. So, if you want to pass the
pointer to a function that expects an instance of one of the traits
implemented by T
I don't think so, because the fact that the particular instance of T implements
the Deref trait cannot have any effect on the decorator code, since it's not in
the bounds for T.
What instead would work is to change the language so that if type Type
implements Trait and all Trait methods take &s
Hi,
I was looking at some structs in Rust that implement the Decorator pattern
- structs that take some value, wrap it, and then provider the same
interface as the value that they are wrapping while providing some extra
behavior. BufferedReader is an example here - it takes another Reader and
prov