% Limits of Lifetimes Given the following code: ```rust,ignore struct Foo; impl Foo { fn mutate_and_share(&mut self) -> &Self { &*self } fn share(&self) {} } fn main() { let mut foo = Foo; let loan = foo.mutate_and_share(); foo.share(); } ``` One might expect it to compile. We call `mutate_and_share`, which mutably borrows `foo` temporarily, but then returns only a shared reference. Therefore we would expect `foo.share()` to succeed as `foo` shouldn't be mutably borrowed. However when we try to compile it: ```text :11:5: 11:8 error: cannot borrow `foo` as immutable because it is also borrowed as mutable :11 foo.share(); ^~~ :10:16: 10:19 note: previous borrow of `foo` occurs here; the mutable borrow prevents subsequent moves, borrows, or modification of `foo` until the borrow ends :10 let loan = foo.mutate_and_share(); ^~~ :12:2: 12:2 note: previous borrow ends here :8 fn main() { :9 let mut foo = Foo; :10 let loan = foo.mutate_and_share(); :11 foo.share(); :12 } ^ ``` What happened? Well, we got the exact same reasoning as we did for [Example 2 in the previous section][ex2]. We desugar the program and we get the following: ```rust,ignore struct Foo; impl Foo { fn mutate_and_share<'a>(&'a mut self) -> &'a Self { &'a *self } fn share<'a>(&'a self) {} } fn main() { 'b: { let mut foo: Foo = Foo; 'c: { let loan: &'c Foo = Foo::mutate_and_share::<'c>(&'c mut foo); 'd: { Foo::share::<'d>(&'d foo); } } } } ``` The lifetime system is forced to extend the `&mut foo` to have lifetime `'c`, due to the lifetime of `loan` and mutate_and_share's signature. Then when we try to call `share`, and it sees we're trying to alias that `&'c mut foo` and blows up in our face! This program is clearly correct according to the reference semantics we actually care about, but the lifetime system is too coarse-grained to handle that. TODO: other common problems? SEME regions stuff, mostly? [ex2]: lifetimes.html#example-aliasing-a-mutable-reference