I'm trying to find examples for constructor functions in traits, but haven't had much luck. Is this a idiomatic thing to do in Rust?
trait A {
fn new() -> A;
}
struct B;
impl A for B {
fn new() -> B {
B
}
}
fn main() {
println!("message")
}
<anon>:7:8: 9:9 error: method `new` has an incompatible type for trait: expected trait A, found struct `B` [E0053]
<anon>:7 fn new() -> B {
<anon>:8 B
<anon>:9 }
<anon>:7:8: 9:9 help: see the detailed explanation for E0053
error: aborting due to previous error
playpen: application terminated with error code 101
Casting this returns a core::marker::Sized related error.
trait A {
fn new() -> A;
}
struct B;
impl A for B {
fn new() -> A {
B as A
}
}
fn main() {
println!("message")
}
<anon>:8:10: 8:16 error: cast to unsized type: `B` as `A`
<anon>:8 B as A
^~~~~~
<anon>:8:10: 8:11 help: consider using a box or reference as appropriate
<anon>:8 B as A
^
<anon>:7:20: 7:21 error: the trait `core::marker::Sized` is not implemented for the type `A + 'static` [E0277]
<anon>:7 fn new() -> A {
^
<anon>:7:20: 7:21 note: `A + 'static` does not have a constant size known at compile-time
<anon>:7 fn new() -> A {
^
error: aborting due to 2 previous errors
playpen: application terminated with error code 101
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