Transitive converions through derive macros for Rust.
Assume you have types A
, B
and C
with the following, already implemented, conversions:
A -> B
B -> C
Sometimes it might be desirable to have an A -> C
implementation which could easily be represented as A -> B -> C
.
That is precisely what this crate does. Through the Transitive
derive macro, it will implement From
or TryFrom
respectively
for converting from/to the derived type and a target type, given a path of transitions to go through.
use transitive::Transitive;
#[derive(Transitive)]
#[transitive(into(B, C, D))] // impl From<A> for D by doing A -> B -> C -> D
struct A;
#[derive(Transitive)]
#[transitive(into(C, D))] // impl From<B> for D by doing B -> C -> D
struct B;
struct C;
struct D;
impl From<A> for B {
fn from(val: A) -> Self {
Self
}
};
impl From<B> for C {
fn from(val: B) -> Self {
Self
}
};
impl From<C> for D {
fn from(val: C) -> Self {
Self
}
};
#[test]
fn into() {
D::from(A);
D::from(B);
}
More examples and explanations can be found in the documentation.
Licensed under MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT).
Contributions to this repository, unless explicitly stated otherwise, will be considered licensed under MIT. Bugs/issues encountered can be opened here.