this post was submitted on 10 Apr 2024
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Is it really fair to say retain doesn't compose as well just because it requires reference-based update instead of move-based? I also think using move semantics for in-place updates makes it harder to optimise things like a single field being updated on a large struct.
It also seems harsh to say iterators aren't a zero-cost abstraction if they miss an optimisation that falls outside what the API promises. It's natural to expect
collect
to allocate, no?But I'm only writing this because I wonder if I haven't understood your point fully.
(Side note: I think you could implement the API you want on top of
retain_mut
by usingstd::mem::replace
with a default value, but you'd be hoping that the compiler optimises away all thereplace
calls when it inlines and sees the code can't panic. Idk if that would actually work.)The composability doesn't have much to do with whether it's a reference or a move, it's because it bypasses usage of the
Iterator
methods. Iterators chains can consist offilter
,map
and other operations, which allows various functions and/or closures to be composed together. Whereas withretain_mut()
there isn't really a chain and functions you may otherwise use in an iterator chain become harder to (re)use.You're right, I wouldn't say iterators aren't a zero-cost abstraction. But most abstractions are also leaky -- it's just the extent in which the leakiness is exposed that makes them more or less effective. As such, saying to just use
retain_mut
instead of the iterator approach highlights the shortcoming of the abstraction. But if the same results could be achieved while still using the same iterator, that would make that abstraction more useful and consistent. And that's great, because that means we need to worry less when using iterators :)