mirror of
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust.git
synced 2024-11-22 06:44:35 +00:00
doc: Add better explanation
This commit is contained in:
parent
53ed660d47
commit
6600c972e6
@ -12,7 +12,24 @@ use std::vec;
|
||||
use crate::{Idx, IndexSlice};
|
||||
|
||||
/// An owned contiguous collection of `T`s, indexed by `I` rather than by `usize`.
|
||||
/// Its purpose is to avoid mixing indexes.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// ## Why use this instead of a `Vec`?
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// An `IndexVec` allows element access only via a specific associated index type, meaning that
|
||||
/// trying to use the wrong index type (possibly accessing an invalid element) will fail at
|
||||
/// compile time.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// It also documents what the index is indexing: in a `HashMap<usize, Something>` it's not
|
||||
/// immediately clear what the `usize` means, while a `HashMap<FieldIdx, Something>` makes it obvious.
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// ```compile_fail
|
||||
/// use rustc_index::{Idx, IndexVec};
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// fn f<I1: Idx, I2: Idx>(vec1: IndexVec<I1, u8>, idx1: I1, idx2: I2) {
|
||||
/// &vec1[idx1]; // Ok
|
||||
/// &vec1[idx2]; // Compile error!
|
||||
/// }
|
||||
/// ```
|
||||
///
|
||||
/// While it's possible to use `u32` or `usize` directly for `I`,
|
||||
/// you almost certainly want to use a [`newtype_index!`]-generated type instead.
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user