rebindable 1.0.0

D data structures that work for any type.


To use this package, run the following command in your project's root directory:

Manual usage
Put the following dependency into your project's dependences section:

What is this?

rebindable is a D library of data types that work for any type, regardless of constness.

Its primary module is rebindable.Rebindable, with Rebindable!T, a type that takes an arbitrary type parameter T and assumes control over its lifetime. You can use rebindable.set(value) and rebindable.get to interact with the contained value.

This is done using helper type, rebindable.DeepUnqual, that takes an arbitrary type T and produces a "primitive mutable type", of an "equivalent" type to T - with pointers in all the right places so that when you allocate an array of it, the garbage collector will still scan its actual references and skip non-pointer data.

At the same time, this type will be freely reassignable without running any lifetime functions: constructors, destructors, copy constructors etc.

Reassignment will work even if the given type is immutable or contains immutable fields.

This can be useful when writing data structures that work with immutable types, but should not themselves be immutable.

rebindable also contains rebindable.Nullable, a demo implementation of Nullable on top of Rebindable, and rebindable.AssocArray, a replacement type for D associative arrays that allows values to be immutable.

Warning: If a rebindable.AssocArray is collected while containing values, the destructors of values contained within will not be called! See bottom for why.

Example usage

rebindable.Rebindable

import rebindable.Rebindable;

struct DataStructure(T)
{
  private Rebindable!T store;

  this(T value)
  {
    this.store.set(value);
  }

  ~this()
  {
    destroy!false(this.store.get);
  }

  T get()
  {
    return this.store.get;
  }

  void set(T value)
  {
    destroy!false(this.store.get);
    this.store.set(value);
  }
}

rebindable.DeepUnqual

import rebindable.DeepUnqual;

static assert(is(DeepUnqual!int == int));
static assert(is(DeepUnqual!(const int) == int));
static assert(hasIndirections!(DeepUnqual!(void delegate())));

rebindable.Nullable

import rebindable.Nullable;

Nullable!(const int) ni;

assert(ni.isNull);

ni = 5;
assert(!ni.isNull);
assert(ni.get == 5);

ni.nullify;
assert(ni.isNull);

assert(ni == Nullable!(const int)());

rebindable.AssocArray

import rebindable.AssocArray;

immutable struct S
{
    int[] data;
}

AssocArray!(int, S) assocArray;

assocArray[0] = S([5]);
assocArray[0] = S([6]);
assert(assocArray[0] == S([6]));

But... why?

There is actually no good way in D today to create a type that is "like another type, but reassignable and also its destructor is not run on scope exit." My post "The Turducken Type Technique" ( https://forum.dlang.org/thread/[email protected] ) was aimed at this goal, but somebody recently pointed out that it's undefined behavior to have a data type allocated with an immutable member that is cast to mutable. I have no reason to expect that to not hold when the data type is hidden in a union.

Hence DeepUnqual: a data type of the same layout, but with no immutability at all.

Is this good? No. Heck no, this is terrible code. I hate it. But I believe it's semantically valid, and I don't see how we are supposed to use immutable types at all, practically, without it. So might as well put it out here for review and improvement.

Hey, maybe somebody has a better idea.

Is this safe?

Well, it's @safe so long as you @trusted me. :-)

Nothing with this amount of pointer casting can truly be called safe. It's safe so far as I know, provided that you:

  • never expose a DeepUnqual of an immutable type by reference
  • always match up assignments (see rebindable.Nullable) with destroy calls.

You can use rebindable.ProblematicType to test your container implementation for issues - compare the rebindable.Nullable unittests.

Why does AssocArray not call destructors?

This weakness is unavoidable without reimplementing associative arrays from scratch. It arises because AssocArray uses a Rebindable!Value[Key] array internally, which has no destructors. And as it is a struct, AssocArray's own destructor would be called on every scope exit. Maybe it could be ref-counted? Alternately, if AssocArray was implemented using a Tuple(Key, Rebindable!Value)[] internally, that array could be allocated as Tuple(Key, Value)[] and cast to the internal type, guaranteeing correct finalizer type info.

Authors:
  • @FeepingCreature
Dependencies:
none
Versions:
1.0.0 2022-Jul-22
0.1.0 2021-Nov-02
0.0.4 2021-Oct-15
0.0.3 2021-Sep-29
0.0.2 2021-Sep-29
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