this repo has no description
1+++
2date = 2019-07-14T17:38:48+01:00
3description = "Simple introduction to Rust's ownership system"
4title = "Here be (owned) books"
5
6[taxonomies]
7tags = [
8 "rust"
9]
10+++
11
12One of Rust's biggest pros is its unique ownership system. Unfortunately, it is
13also one of the hardest things to learn. In this article I will try to explain
14it the same way I had learned it and how I introduce it to people.
15
16**Disclaimer**: If you do not find this article helpful try to search for another.
17People are different and different things *zing* them.
18
19## Let's have a book
20
21Ownership becomes simple and natural if you just acknowledge it as an
22application of real world relationships. For example, imagine types in Rust as
23a kind of written note. We have different types of notes and based on that, each
24of them will be handled differently.
25
26- short ones, like phone no. of the hot waiter/waitress
27- longer ones, like this article
28- longest ones, like a *Lord of the Rings*
29
30Using this analogy let me try to introduce you, dear reader, to the amazing
31world of Rust's ownership.
32
33## One can own the book
34
35Each note, no matter what size it is, can have one owner. Me, you, anyone, it
36doesn't matter, but there will be only one owner. You can do whatever you want
37with such note but with that power comes, not so great, responsibility: after
38you are done with this book you will need to get rid of it. Since you are a law
39abiding citizen you will recycle the note in the appropriate receptacle, but it is your
40responsibility to do it. Of course this is not the only way to deal with a note. You
41can also give it to someone and then it will be hers or his responsibility.
42
43To rephrase it in the Rust way, it would look like this:
44
45```rust
46struct Note;
47
48fn john() {
49 let book = Note; // john creates the book and he owns it
50
51 // here he can do whatever he want with our `book`
52} // at the end of his life john will destroy all his belongings
53
54fn steve() {
55 let book = Note; // new book
56
57 // he can do whatever he wants to do with his book
58
59 sally(book);
60 // steve gives the book to `sally`,
61 // Sally has the responsibility to destroy it
62
63 // now steve cannot do anything with this book,
64 // as it is not his personal belonging anymore
65}
66```
67
68## One can borrow the book
69
70When we don't want to give someone a book (we like that one), we can also lend
71them one. And there are two ways to borrow one book:
72
73- We can edit that book (ex. it is our personal dairy) and we lend it to someone
74 to check our spelling. We trust that person and we explicitly allow her to
75 edit our notes in place. We call it **mutable borrow**.
76- We do not trust someone and we lend our beloved book with no permission to edit
77 it. Even more, that person knows, that writing something in that book will
78 make us go rampage and destroy the whole universe. It will be an **immutable
79 borrow**.
80
81Of course if we borrow something from someone else, then we can lend it further
82with the same rules that were applied to us.
83
84Rust also ensures that **mutable borrow** is unique. There will never be more
85than one person that will be allowed to edit the book. We can still create a chain
86of trust - like when I find someone who is better at English than me, I would
87allow this person to correct an article written by me or my friend who has
88entrusted me with correcting his text.
89
90**Immutable borrows** aren't exclusive. I can lend my books as many times as I
91want with one exception: I cannot lend a book that is still borrowed by someone
92who can change its content.
93
94In Rust it would look like that:
95
96```rust
97fn my() {
98 let mut book = Note;
99
100 spelling_corrector(&mut book);
101 // we must explicitly mention that we lend the book
102 // and we don't give it away
103
104 reader(&book);
105}
106
107fn spelling_corrector(book: &mut Note) {
108 // correct spelling in place
109}
110
111fn reader(book: &Note) {
112 // read a book
113}
114```
115
116## Not all notes are worth borrowing
117
118Sometimes this whole process of lending and then receiving a note back is much
119more complicated then just cloning the whole note for someone else. Imagine that
120you are in school and friend wants to copy your homework. What you do is lend
121your homework to him, and with caution he can clone it on his own. This is what
122Rust's `Clone` trait provides - a method to clone content of struct without moving
123its ownership.
124
125```rust
126#[derive(Clone)]
127struct Homework;
128
129fn my() {
130 let homework = Homework;
131
132 friend(&homework);
133}
134
135fn friend(work: &Homework) { // we lend it immutably
136 let mut homework: Homework = work.clone();
137 // your friend now has his own modifiable copy
138}
139```
140
141But some notes are even shorter than that. They are so short and easy to clone
142that it is much easier to clone them every time, instead of explicitly
143calling the method. Like when you give your phone number to a hot girl at the
144bar, the `Copy` trait automatically clones your note so the other has their own copy.
145Again, this is for small types that can be mechanically copied each time when needed.
146
147```rust
148#[derive(Copy, Clone)]
149// everything that is `Copy` must be also `Clone`
150struct PhoneNo;
151
152fn my() {
153 let no = PhoneNo;
154
155 hot_stuff(no);
156}
157
158fn hot_stuff(no: PhoneNo) {
159 // fingers crossed
160}
161```
162
163## Conclusion
164
165There is more to learn, but these are the basic laws of ownership in Rust.
166Everything else is based on this. If you understand this, it will become much
167easier for you to understand how other types behave and, more importantly, why
168they work the way they do.