pub trait Copy: Clone { }
Expand description
Types whose values can be duplicated simply by copying bits.
By default, variable bindings have โmove semantics.โ In other words:
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Foo;
let x = Foo;
let y = x;
// `x` has moved into `y`, and so cannot be used
// println!("{:?}", x); // error: use of moved value
However, if a type implements Copy
, it instead has โcopy semanticsโ:
// We can derive a `Copy` implementation. `Clone` is also required, as it's
// a supertrait of `Copy`.
#[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone)]
struct Foo;
let x = Foo;
let y = x;
// `y` is a copy of `x`
println!("{:?}", x); // A-OK!
Itโs important to note that in these two examples, the only difference is whether you
are allowed to access x
after the assignment. Under the hood, both a copy and a move
can result in bits being copied in memory, although this is sometimes optimized away.
How can I implement Copy
?
There are two ways to implement Copy
on your type. The simplest is to use derive
:
#[derive(Copy, Clone)]
struct MyStruct;
You can also implement Copy
and Clone
manually:
struct MyStruct;
impl Copy for MyStruct { }
impl Clone for MyStruct {
fn clone(&self) -> MyStruct {
*self
}
}
There is a small difference between the two: the derive
strategy will also place a Copy
bound on type parameters, which isnโt always desired.
Whatโs the difference between Copy
and Clone
?
Copies happen implicitly, for example as part of an assignment y = x
. The behavior of
Copy
is not overloadable; it is always a simple bit-wise copy.
Cloning is an explicit action, x.clone()
. The implementation of Clone
can
provide any type-specific behavior necessary to duplicate values safely. For example,
the implementation of Clone
for String
needs to copy the pointed-to string
buffer in the heap. A simple bitwise copy of String
values would merely copy the
pointer, leading to a double free down the line. For this reason, String
is Clone
but not Copy
.
Clone
is a supertrait of Copy
, so everything which is Copy
must also implement
Clone
. If a type is Copy
then its Clone
implementation only needs to return *self
(see the example above).
When can my type be Copy
?
A type can implement Copy
if all of its components implement Copy
. For example, this
struct can be Copy
:
#[derive(Copy, Clone)]
struct Point {
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
A struct can be Copy
, and i32
is Copy
, therefore Point
is eligible to be Copy
.
By contrast, consider
struct PointList {
points: Vec<Point>,
}
The struct PointList
cannot implement Copy
, because Vec<T>
is not Copy
. If we
attempt to derive a Copy
implementation, weโll get an error:
the trait `Copy` may not be implemented for this type; field `points` does not implement `Copy`
Shared references (&T
) are also Copy
, so a type can be Copy
, even when it holds
shared references of types T
that are not Copy
. Consider the following struct,
which can implement Copy
, because it only holds a shared reference to our non-Copy
type PointList
from above:
#[derive(Copy, Clone)]
struct PointListWrapper<'a> {
point_list_ref: &'a PointList,
}
When canโt my type be Copy
?
Some types canโt be copied safely. For example, copying &mut T
would create an aliased
mutable reference. Copying String
would duplicate responsibility for managing the
String
โs buffer, leading to a double free.
Generalizing the latter case, any type implementing Drop
canโt be Copy
, because itโs
managing some resource besides its own size_of::<T>
bytes.
If you try to implement Copy
on a struct or enum containing non-Copy
data, you will get
the error E0204.
When should my type be Copy
?
Generally speaking, if your type can implement Copy
, it should. Keep in mind, though,
that implementing Copy
is part of the public API of your type. If the type might become
non-Copy
in the future, it could be prudent to omit the Copy
implementation now, to
avoid a breaking API change.
Additional implementors
In addition to the implementors listed below,
the following types also implement Copy
:
- Function item types (i.e., the distinct types defined for each function)
- Function pointer types (e.g.,
fn() -> i32
) - Tuple types, if each component also implements
Copy
(e.g.,()
,(i32, bool)
) - Closure types, if they capture no value from the environment
or if all such captured values implement
Copy
themselves. Note that variables captured by shared reference always implementCopy
(even if the referent doesnโt), while variables captured by mutable reference never implementCopy
.
Implementations on Foreign Types
impl<'a> Copy for IoSlice<'a>
impl Copy for Empty
impl Copy for Ipv4Addr
impl Copy for SocketAddrV4
impl<'a> Copy for Component<'a>
impl Copy for System
impl Copy for Shutdown
impl Copy for RecvError
impl<'a> Copy for Prefix<'a>
impl Copy for ExitCode
impl Copy for AccessError
impl Copy for SocketAddr
impl Copy for SystemTime
impl Copy for Instant
impl Copy for Sink
impl Copy for IpAddr
impl Copy for WaitTimeoutResult
impl Copy for SocketAddrV6
impl Copy for ExitStatusError
impl<'a> Copy for PrefixComponent<'a>
impl Copy for ErrorKind
impl Copy for UCred
impl Copy for BacktraceStyle
impl<'a> Copy for Ancestors<'a>
impl Copy for RecvTimeoutError
impl Copy for FileType
impl Copy for ThreadId
impl Copy for Ipv6MulticastScope
impl Copy for Ipv6Addr
impl<'fd> Copy for BorrowedFd<'fd>
impl Copy for ExitStatus
impl<T> Copy for SendError<T> where
T: Copy,
impl<T> Copy for TrySendError<T> where
T: Copy,
impl Copy for TryRecvError
impl Copy for SeekFrom
impl Copy for NonZeroU16
impl Copy for NonZeroU128
impl Copy for __m256i
impl Copy for bool
impl Copy for Layout
impl<T> Copy for MaybeUninit<T> where
T: Copy,
impl<T> Copy for Bound<T> where
T: Copy,
impl<P> Copy for Pin<P> where
P: Copy,
impl<'a> Copy for Location<'a>
impl<T, const LANES: usize> Copy for Simd<T, LANES> where
T: SimdElement,
LaneCount<LANES>: SupportedLaneCount,
impl Copy for i8
impl Copy for __m128
impl Copy for i64
impl<T> Copy for Poll<T> where
T: Copy,
impl<T> Copy for Wrapping<T> where
T: Copy,
impl Copy for f32
impl Copy for Utf8Error
impl Copy for i16
impl Copy for CpuidResult
impl<T> Copy for Option<T> where
T: Copy,
impl Copy for Ordering
impl Copy for usize
impl Copy for FpCategory
impl Copy for u32
impl Copy for TypeId
impl<'a, T, const N: usize> Copy for ArrayWindows<'a, T, N> where
T: 'a + Copy,
impl Copy for !
impl<Y, R> Copy for GeneratorState<Y, R> where
Y: Copy,
R: Copy,
impl Copy for __m512d
impl Copy for u64
impl Copy for __m128bh
impl<T> Copy for Reverse<T> where
T: Copy,
impl Copy for __m512i
impl Copy for NonZeroI64
impl Copy for NonZeroI8
impl Copy for u16
impl Copy for NonZeroU32
impl Copy for TryFromCharError
impl Copy for NonZeroI128
impl Copy for __m256
impl<Dyn> Copy for DynMetadata<Dyn> where
Dyn: ?Sized,
impl Copy for CharTryFromError
impl<T> Copy for *mut T where
T: ?Sized,
impl Copy for u8
impl Copy for RawWakerVTable
impl Copy for __m512
impl Copy for char
impl Copy for AllocError
impl Copy for i128
impl Copy for Infallible
impl Copy for NonZeroU64
impl Copy for i32
impl Copy for NonZeroUsize
impl Copy for SearchStep
impl<T> Copy for ManuallyDrop<T> where
T: Copy + ?Sized,
impl Copy for Which
impl<F> Copy for RepeatWith<F> where
F: Copy,
impl Copy for RangeFull
impl<T> Copy for Discriminant<T>
impl<Idx> Copy for RangeTo<Idx> where
Idx: Copy,
impl<B, C> Copy for ControlFlow<B, C> where
B: Copy,
C: Copy,
impl<T, const LANES: usize> Copy for Mask<T, LANES> where
T: MaskElement,
LaneCount<LANES>: SupportedLaneCount,
impl<T> Copy for Saturating<T> where
T: Copy,
impl Copy for isize
impl Copy for __m256bh
impl<T> Copy for NonNull<T> where
T: ?Sized,
impl Copy for f64
impl Copy for NonZeroIsize
impl Copy for __m128d
impl Copy for TryFromSliceError
impl<T, const N: usize> Copy for [T; N] where
T: Copy,
impl Copy for __m512bh
impl Copy for Ordering
impl Copy for u128
impl Copy for NonZeroI32
impl<T> Copy for *const T where
T: ?Sized,
impl Copy for Duration
impl Copy for NonZeroU8
impl<Idx> Copy for RangeToInclusive<Idx> where
Idx: Copy,
impl<'_, T> Copy for &'_ T where
T: ?Sized,
Shared references can be copied, but mutable references cannot!