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@ -1,5 +1,45 @@
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# Subtyping and Variance
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# Subtyping and Variance
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Rust uses lifetimes to track the relationships between borrows and ownership.
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However, a naive implementation of lifetimes would be either too restrictive,
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or permit undefined behaviour. Let's see a few examples:
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```rust,ignore
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fn debug<'a>(a: &'a str, b: &'a str) {
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println!("a = {:?} b = {:?}", a, b)
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}
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fn main() {
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let a: &'static str = "hello";
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{
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let b = String::from("world");
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let b = &b; // 'b has a shorter lifetime than 'static
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debug(a, b);
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}
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}
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```
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In an overly restrictive implementation of lifetimes, since `a` and `b` have differeing lifetimes,
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we might see the following error:
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```text
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error[E0308]: mismatched types
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--> src/main.rs:6:16
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6 | debug(a, b);
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| ^
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| |
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| expected `&'static str`, found struct `&'b str`
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```
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This is over-restrictive. In this case, what we want is to accept any type that lives "at least as long" as `<'a>`.
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This is what subtyping is intended to fix.
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Let's define lifetime `'a` to be a `subtype` of lifetime `'b`, if and only if `'a` lives _at least as long_ as `'b`.
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We will denote this as `'a: 'b`
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---
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Subtyping is a relationship between types that allows statically typed
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Subtyping is a relationship between types that allows statically typed
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languages to be a bit more flexible and permissive.
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languages to be a bit more flexible and permissive.
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