pub trait Default: Sized {
// Required method
fn default() -> Self;
}
Expand description
A trait for giving a type a useful default value.
Sometimes, you want to fall back to some kind of default value, and
don’t particularly care what it is. This comes up often with struct
s
that define a set of options:
struct SomeOptions {
foo: i32,
bar: f32,
}
How can we define some default values? You can use Default
:
#[derive(Default)]
struct SomeOptions {
foo: i32,
bar: f32,
}
fn main() {
let options: SomeOptions = Default::default();
}
Now, you get all of the default values. Rust implements Default
for various primitives types.
If you want to override a particular option, but still retain the other defaults:
fn main() {
let options = SomeOptions { foo: 42, ..Default::default() };
}
§Derivable
This trait can be used with #[derive]
if all of the type’s fields implement
Default
. When derive
d, it will use the default value for each field’s type.
§enum
s
When using #[derive(Default)]
on an enum
, you need to choose which unit variant will be
default. You do this by placing the #[default]
attribute on the variant.
#[derive(Default)]
enum Kind {
#[default]
A,
B,
C,
}
You cannot use the #[default]
attribute on non-unit or non-exhaustive variants.
The #[default]
attribute was stabilized in Rust 1.62.0.
§How can I implement Default
?
Provide an implementation for the default()
method that returns the value of
your type that should be the default:
enum Kind {
A,
B,
C,
}
impl Default for Kind {
fn default() -> Self { Kind::A }
}
§Examples
#[derive(Default)]
struct SomeOptions {
foo: i32,
bar: f32,
}
Required Methods§
1.0.0 · Sourcefn default() -> Self
fn default() -> Self
Returns the “default value” for a type.
Default values are often some kind of initial value, identity value, or anything else that may make sense as a default.
§Examples
Using built-in default values:
let i: i8 = Default::default();
let (x, y): (Option<String>, f64) = Default::default();
let (a, b, (c, d)): (i32, u32, (bool, bool)) = Default::default();
Making your own:
enum Kind {
A,
B,
C,
}
impl Default for Kind {
fn default() -> Self { Kind::A }
}
Dyn Compatibility§
This trait is not dyn compatible.
In older versions of Rust, dyn compatibility was called "object safety", so this trait is not object safe.
Implementors§
impl Default for &str
impl Default for &CStr
impl Default for &mut str
impl Default for AsciiChar
impl Default for bool
impl Default for char
impl Default for f16
impl Default for f32
impl Default for f64
impl Default for f128
impl Default for i8
impl Default for i16
impl Default for i32
impl Default for i64
impl Default for i128
impl Default for isize
impl Default for u8
impl Default for u16
impl Default for u32
impl Default for u64
impl Default for u128
impl Default for ()
impl Default for usize
impl Default for Error
impl Default for SipHasher
impl Default for PhantomPinned
impl Default for RangeFull
impl Default for Alignment
Returns Alignment::MIN
, which is valid for any type.
impl Default for AtomicBool
impl Default for AtomicI8
impl Default for AtomicI16
impl Default for AtomicI32
impl Default for AtomicI64
impl Default for AtomicI128
impl Default for AtomicIsize
impl Default for AtomicU8
impl Default for AtomicU16
impl Default for AtomicU32
impl Default for AtomicU64
impl Default for AtomicU128
impl Default for AtomicUsize
impl Default for Duration
impl<A, B> Default for Chain<A, B>
impl<H> Default for BuildHasherDefault<H>
impl<I> Default for Cloned<I>where
I: Default,
impl<I> Default for Copied<I>where
I: Default,
impl<I> Default for Enumerate<I>where
I: Default,
impl<I> Default for Flatten<I>
impl<I> Default for Fuse<I>where
I: Default,
impl<I> Default for Rev<I>where
I: Default,
impl<Idx> Default for no_std_compat::ops::Range<Idx>where
Idx: Default,
impl<Idx> Default for core::range::Range<Idx>where
Idx: Default,
impl<T> Default for &[T]
impl<T> Default for &mut [T]
impl<T> Default for Option<T>
impl<T> Default for [T; 0]
impl<T> Default for [T; 1]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 2]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 3]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 4]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 5]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 6]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 7]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 8]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 9]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 10]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 11]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 12]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 13]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 14]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 15]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 16]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 17]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 18]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 19]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 20]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 21]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 22]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 23]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 24]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 25]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 26]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 27]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 28]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 29]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 30]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 31]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for [T; 32]where
T: Default,
impl<T> Default for (T₁, T₂, …, Tₙ)where
T: Default,
This trait is implemented for tuples up to twelve items long.