Which of these code styles do you find preferable?
First option using mut with constructor in the beginning:
let mut post_form = PostInsertForm::new(
data.name.trim().to_string(),
local_user_view.person.id,
data.community_id,
);
post_form.url = url.map(Into::into);
post_form.body = body;
post_form.alt_text = data.alt_text.clone();
post_form.nsfw = data.nsfw;
post_form.language_id = language_id;
Second option without mut and constructor at the end:
let post_form = PostInsertForm {
url: url.map(Into::into),
body,
alt_text: data.alt_text.clone(),
nsfw: data.nsfw,
language_id,
..PostInsertForm::new(
data.name.trim().to_string(),
local_user_view.person.id,
data.community_id,
)
};
You can see the full PR here: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/5037/files
Second one if a constructor or a builder is not an option. 1 is out of the question.
Why are the Lemmy devs asking for this though?
Neither.
- make
new()
give you a fully valid and usable struct value. - or use a builder (you can call it something else like Partial/Incomplete/whatever) struct so you can’t accidentally do anything without a fully initialized value.
Maybe you should also use substructs that hold some of the info.
We used to have TypedBuilder (which is builder pattern), but switched to DeriveNew, as its a bit cleaner, and requires less generated code.
- make
also adding my vote for the second one
100% the second one. It’s the idiomatic way to do this in Rust, and it leaves you with an immutable object.
I personally like to move the short declarations together (i.e. body down with language_id (or both at the top)) but that’s a minor quibble.
Defo the second one, the first is weird imo
Definitely the second one.
- It avoids Mut
- It makes clear that the initialization is over at the end of of the statement. The first option invites people to change some more properties hundreds of lines down where you won’t see them.
@DemocratPostingSucks@lemm.ee @Deebster@programming.dev @al4s@feddit.org Thanks for the feedback! Personally I prefer the first option, but based on your comments I will merge the PR with the second option.
If you’re ever forced to do something the second way, you can also wrap it in braces, that way you end up with an immutable value again:
let app = { let mut app = ... ... app };
Thats even more verbose so the second option is better.
Yeah if you have the second option, use it, but if the struct has private fields it won’t work.