There are a two solutions to your problem. Let's start with the simplest one:
Add a lifetime to your trait
trait Foo<'a> {
type Item: AsRef<Path>;
type Iter: Iterator<Item = Self::Item>;
fn get(&'a self) -> Self::Iter;
}
This requires you to annotate the lifetime everywhere you use the trait. When you implement the trait, you need to do a generic implementation:
impl<'a> Foo<'a> for Bar {
type Item = &'a PathBuf;
type Iter = std::slice::Iter<'a, PathBuf>;
fn get(&'a self) -> Self::Iter {
self.v.iter()
}
}
When you require the trait for a generic argument, you also need to make sure that any references to your trait object have the same lifetime:
fn fooget<'a, T: Foo<'a>>(foo: &'a T) {}
Implement the trait for a reference to your type
Instead of implementing the trait for your type, implement it for a reference to your type. The trait never needs to know anything about lifetimes this way.
The trait function then must take its argument by value. In your case you will implement the trait for a reference:
trait Foo {
type Item: AsRef<Path>;
type Iter: Iterator<Item = Self::Item>;
fn get(self) -> Self::Iter;
}
impl<'a> Foo for &'a Bar {
type Item = &'a PathBuf;
type Iter = std::slice::Iter<'a, PathBuf>;
fn get(self) -> Self::Iter {
self.v.iter()
}
}
Your fooget
function now simply becomes
fn fooget<T: Foo>(foo: T) {}
The problem with this is that the fooget
function doesn't know T
is in reality a &Bar
. When you call the get
function, you are actually moving out of the foo
variable. You don't move out of the object, you just move the reference. If your fooget
function tries to call get
twice, the function won't compile.
If you want your fooget
function to only accept arguments where the Foo
trait is implemented for references, you need to explicitly state this bound:
fn fooget_twice<'a, T>(foo: &'a T)
where
&'a T: Foo,
{}
The where
clause makes sure that you only call this function for references where Foo
was implemented for the reference instead of the type. It may also be implemented for both.
Technically, the compiler could automatically infer the lifetime in fooget_twice
so you could write it as
fn fooget_twice<T>(foo: &T)
where
&T: Foo,
{}
but it's not smart enough yet.
For more complicated cases, you can use a Rust feature which is not yet implemented: Generic Associated Types (GATs). Work for that is being tracked in issue 44265.