I have a configuration struct that looks like this:
struct Conf {
list: Vec<String>,
}
The implementation was internally populating the list member, but now I have decided that I want to delegate that task to another object. So I have:
trait ListBuilder {
fn build(&self, list: &mut Vec<String>);
}
struct Conf<T: Sized + ListBuilder> {
list: Vec<String>,
builder: T,
}
impl<T> Conf<T>
where
T: Sized + ListBuilder,
{
fn init(&mut self) {
self.builder.build(&mut self.list);
}
}
impl<T> Conf<T>
where
T: Sized + ListBuilder,
{
pub fn new(lb: T) -> Self {
let mut c = Conf {
list: vec![],
builder: lb,
};
c.init();
c
}
}
That seems to work fine, but now everywhere that I use Conf, I have to change it:
fn do_something(c: &Conf) {
// ...
}
becomes
fn do_something<T>(c: &Conf<T>)
where
T: ListBuilder,
{
// ...
}
Since I have many such functions, this conversion is painful, especially since most usages of the Conf class don't care about the ListBuilder - it's an implementation detail. I'm concerned that if I add another generic type to Conf, now I have to go back and add another generic parameter everywhere. Is there any way to avoid this?
I know that I could use a closure instead for the list builder, but I have the added constraint that my Conf struct needs to be Clone, and the actual builder implementation is more complex and has several functions and some state in the builder, which makes a closure approach unwieldy.