Which of these code styles do you find preferable?

First option using mut with constructor in the beginning:

  let mut post_form = PostInsertForm::new(
    data.name.trim().to_string(),
    local_user_view.person.id,
    data.community_id,
  );
  post_form.url = url.map(Into::into);
  post_form.body = body;
  post_form.alt_text = data.alt_text.clone();
  post_form.nsfw = data.nsfw;
  post_form.language_id = language_id;

Second option without mut and constructor at the end:

  let post_form = PostInsertForm {
    url: url.map(Into::into),
    body,
    alt_text: data.alt_text.clone(),
    nsfw: data.nsfw,
    language_id,
    ..PostInsertForm::new(
      data.name.trim().to_string(),
      local_user_view.person.id,
      data.community_id,
    )
  };

You can see the full PR here: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/pull/5037/files

  • BB_C@programming.dev
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    7 months ago

    Neither.

    • make new() give you a fully valid and usable struct value.
    • or use a builder (you can call it something else like Partial/Incomplete/whatever) struct so you can’t accidentally do anything without a fully initialized value.

    Maybe you should also use substructs that hold some of the info.

  • asudox@programming.dev
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    7 months ago

    Second one if a constructor or a builder is not an option. 1 is out of the question.

    Why are the Lemmy devs asking for this though?

  • Deebster@programming.dev
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    7 months ago

    100% the second one. It’s the idiomatic way to do this in Rust, and it leaves you with an immutable object.

    I personally like to move the short declarations together (i.e. body down with language_id (or both at the top)) but that’s a minor quibble.

  • livingcoder@programming.dev
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    7 months ago

    I prefer to encapsulate a mutable reference to the instance in a scope.

    let post_form = {
        let mut post_form = PostInsertForm::new(
            // your constructor arguments
        );
        post_form.some_mutating_method(
            // mutation arguments
        );
        post_form
    };
    

    This way you’re left with an immutable instance and you encapsulate all of the logic needed to setup the instance in one place.