logoalt Hacker News

dwattttttoday at 12:39 AM1 replyview on HN

> This does come with code-bloat. So the Rust std sometimes exposes a generic function (which gets monomorphized), but internally passes it off to a non-generic function.

There's no free lunch here. Reducing the amount of code that's monomorphised reduces the code emitted & improves compile times, but it reduces the scope of the code that's exposed to the input type, which reduces optimisation opportunities.


Replies

josephgtoday at 1:41 AM

Yes. But I like that rust gives you the option.

In C, the only way to write a monomorphized hash table or array list involves horribly ugly macros that are difficult to write and debug. Rust does monomorphization by default, but you can also use &dyn trait for vtable-like behaviour if you prefer.