Expand description
Used to do a cheap reference-to-reference conversion.
This trait is similar to AsMut
which is used for converting between mutable references.
If you need to do a costly conversion it is better to implement From
with type
&T
or write a custom function.
AsRef
has the same signature as Borrow
, but Borrow
is different in few aspects:
- Unlike
AsRef
,Borrow
has a blanket impl for anyT
, and can be used to accept either a reference or a value. Borrow
also requires thatHash
,Eq
andOrd
for borrowed value are equivalent to those of the owned value. For this reason, if you want to borrow only a single field of a struct you can implementAsRef
, but notBorrow
.
Note: This trait must not fail. If the conversion can fail, use a
dedicated method which returns an Option<T>
or a Result<T, E>
.
Generic Implementations
AsRef
auto-dereferences if the inner type is a reference or a mutable reference (e.g.:foo.as_ref()
will work the same iffoo
has type&mut Foo
or&&mut Foo
)
Examples
By using trait bounds we can accept arguments of different types as long as they can be
converted to the specified type T
.
For example: By creating a generic function that takes an AsRef<str>
we express that we
want to accept all references that can be converted to &str
as an argument.
Since both String
and &str
implement AsRef<str>
we can accept both as input argument.
fn is_hello<T: AsRef<str>>(s: T) {
assert_eq!("hello", s.as_ref());
}
let s = "hello";
is_hello(s);
let s = "hello".to_string();
is_hello(s);