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Attempt to describe the intent behind the From trait further #114564

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40 changes: 40 additions & 0 deletions library/core/src/convert/mod.rs
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -478,6 +478,46 @@ pub trait Into<T>: Sized {
/// - `From<T> for U` implies [`Into`]`<U> for T`
/// - `From` is reflexive, which means that `From<T> for T` is implemented
///
/// # When to implement `From`
///
/// While there's no technical restrictions on which conversions can be done using
/// a `From` implementation, the general expectation is that the conversions
/// should typically be restricted as follows:
///
/// * The conversion is *infallible*: if the conversion can fail, use [`TryFrom`]
/// instead; don't provide a `From` impl that panics.
///
/// * The conversion is *lossless*: semantically, it should not lose or discard
/// information. For example, `i32: From<u16>` exists, where the original
/// value can be recovered using `u16: TryFrom<i32>`. And `String: From<&str>`
/// exists, where you can get something equivalent to the original value via
/// `Deref`. But `From` cannot be used to convert from `u32` to `u16`, since
/// that cannot succeed in a lossless way. (There's some wiggle room here for
/// information not considered semantically relevant. For example,
/// `Box<[T]>: From<Vec<T>>` exists even though it might not preserve capacity,
/// like how two vectors can be equal despite differing capacities.)
///
/// * The conversion is *value-preserving*: the conceptual kind and meaning of
/// the resulting value is the same, even though the Rust type and technical
/// representation might be different. For example `-1_i8 as u8` is *lossless*,
/// since `as` casting back can recover the original value, but that conversion
/// is *not* available via `From` because `-1` and `255` are different conceptual
/// values (despite being identical bit patterns technically). But
/// `f32: From<i16>` *is* available because `1_i16` and `1.0_f32` are conceptually
/// the same real number (despite having very different bit patterns technically).
/// `String: From<char>` is available because they're both *text*, but
/// `String: From<u32>` is *not* available, since `1` (a number) and `"1"`
/// (text) are too different. (Converting values to text is instead covered
/// by the [`Display`](crate::fmt::Display) trait.)
///
/// * The conversion is *obvious*: it's the only reasonable conversion between
/// the two types. Otherwise it's better to have it be a named method or
/// constructor, like how [`str::as_bytes`] is a method and how integers have
/// methods like [`u32::from_ne_bytes`], [`u32::from_le_bytes`], and
/// [`u32::from_be_bytes`], none of which are `From` implementations. Whereas
/// there's only one reasonable way to wrap an [`Ipv6Addr`](crate::net::Ipv6Addr)
/// into an [`IpAddr`](crate::net::IpAddr), thus `IpAddr: From<Ipv6Addr>` exists.
///
/// # Examples
///
/// [`String`] implements `From<&str>`:
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