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158 | 158 | //! is called *even if your type was previously pinned*! It is as if the |
159 | 159 | //! compiler automatically called `get_unchecked_mut`. |
160 | 160 | //! |
161 | | -//! This can never cause a problem in safe code because implementing a type that relies on pinning |
162 | | -//! requires unsafe code, but be aware that deciding to make use of pinning |
163 | | -//! in your type (for example by implementing some operation on `Pin<&[mut] Self>`) |
164 | | -//! has consequences for your `Drop` implementation as well: if an element |
165 | | -//! of your type could have been pinned, you must treat Drop as implicitly taking |
166 | | -//! `Pin<&mut Self>`. |
| 161 | +//! This can never cause a problem in safe code because implementing a type that |
| 162 | +//! relies on pinning requires unsafe code, but be aware that deciding to make |
| 163 | +//! use of pinning in your type (for example by implementing some operation on |
| 164 | +//! `Pin<&Self>` or `Pin<&mut Self>`) has consequences for your `Drop` |
| 165 | +//! implementation as well: if an element of your type could have been pinned, |
| 166 | +//! you must treat Drop as implicitly taking `Pin<&mut Self>`. |
167 | 167 | //! |
168 | 168 | //! In particular, if your type is `#[repr(packed)]`, the compiler will automatically |
169 | 169 | //! move fields around to be able to drop them. As a consequence, you cannot use |
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173 | 173 | //! |
174 | 174 | //! One interesting question arises when considering the interaction of pinning and |
175 | 175 | //! the fields of a struct. When can a struct have a "pinning projection", i.e., |
176 | | -//! an operation with type `fn(Pin<&[mut] Struct>) -> Pin<&[mut] Field>`? |
| 176 | +//! an operation with type `fn(Pin<&Struct>) -> Pin<&Field>`? |
177 | 177 | //! In a similar vein, when can a generic wrapper type (such as `Vec<T>`, `Box<T>`, or `RefCell<T>`) |
178 | | -//! have an operation with type `fn(Pin<&[mut] Wrapper<T>>) -> Pin<&[mut] T>`? |
| 178 | +//! have an operation with type `fn(Pin<&Wrapper<T>>) -> Pin<&T>`? |
179 | 179 | //! |
180 | 180 | //! Having a pinning projection for some field means that pinning is "structural": |
181 | 181 | //! when the wrapper is pinned, the field must be considered pinned, too. |
182 | | -//! After all, the pinning projection lets us get a `Pin<&[mut] Field>`. |
| 182 | +//! After all, the pinning projection lets us get a `Pin<&Field>`. |
183 | 183 | //! |
184 | 184 | //! However, structural pinning comes with a few extra requirements, so not all |
185 | 185 | //! wrappers can be structural and hence not all wrappers can offer pinning projections: |
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