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Improve E0311.md description
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@ -21,14 +21,35 @@ where
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}
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```
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In this example we have a trait that borrows some inner data element of type `V`
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from an outer type `T`, through an intermediate type `U`. The compiler is unable
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to prove that the livetime of `U` is long enough to support the reference. To
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fix the issue we can explicitly add lifetime specifiers to the `NestedBorrowMut`
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trait, which link the lifetimes of the various data types and allow the code to
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compile.
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Why doesn't this code compile? The problem has to do with Rust's rules for
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lifetime elision in functions (Chapter 10.3 in the Rust book). One of the
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inputs is a reference to `self`, so the compiler attempts to assign the
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the same lifetime to the `&mut self` input and `&mut V` output to the
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`nested_borrow_mut()` function. The problem is that there is no way for the
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compiler to directly figure out how these two lifetimes are related in the
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implementation of the function. We're implementing the `NextedBorrowMut`
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trait for a type `T`, so the `&mut self` reference has the lifetime of `T`.
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We know that `T` implements the `BorrowMut` trait returning a reference to `U`,
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and that `U` implements the `BorrowMut` trait returning a reference to `V`.
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The key is that we have not told the compiler that those two `U` lifetimes
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are the same: for all it knows, we could be that the first `BorrowMut` trait
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on `T` works with a lifetime `'a` and the second `BorrowMut` trait on `U`
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works on a lifetime `'b`.
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Working implementation of the `NestedBorrowMut` trait:
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The fix here is to add explicit lifetime annotations that tell the compiler
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that the lifetime of the output is in fact the same as the lifetime of the
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input (`self`). There are three references involved, to objects of type `T`
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(`self`), `U` (the intermediate type), and `V` (the return type). In the
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working code below, we see that all have been given the same lifetime `'a`:
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- `&'a mut self` in the function argument list for `T`
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- `U: BorrowMut<V> + 'a` in the trait bounds for `U`
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- `&'a mut V` in the function return for `V`.
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The compiler can the check that the implementation of the
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`nested_borrow_mut()` function satisfies these lifetimes. There are two
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functions being called inside of `nested_borrow_mut()`, both of which are
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the `borrow_mut()` function, which promises that the output lifetime is
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the same as the input lifetime (see lifetime elision rules), which checks out.
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```
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use std::borrow::BorrowMut;
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