Hello! Did you know that the lang team now has regular design meetings? We use these meetings to dig deeper into the output of active project groups. After the meeting, we typically post a recording to YouTube as well as some minutes into the lang-team repository. I wanted to write a quick update listing out some of the meetings we've had recently as well as some of our upcoming meetings.
This blog post is about the meeting we held on 2020-07-29. We discussed the idea of trying to enforce the "well-formedness" rules for type aliases, as has been floated on and off over the years.
The context is that the compiler's current rules expand type aliases as if they were a kind of macro, which means that we don't wind up enforcing many sorts of rules about them.
For example, the following type alias definition is legal even though it would be an error to ever use it:
struct MyType<T: Display> { t: T }
// This alias, perhaps, should err, as `Vec<u32>: Display`
// does not hold:
type MyAlias = MyType<Vec<u32>>;
For more information, check out the minutes from the meeting or watch the recording. We covered a number of examples of what goes wrong, as well as various possible "endstates" that we might want to reach (for example, there is an argument that the above example should be accepted after all, perhaps with a warning).
The conclusion during the meeting was that we would not put a lot of energy into type aliases at this time, and in particular we wouldn't aim for any Edition-related migrations and hard-errors, but we would accept PRs that introduce warnings for type alias definitions that are always an error to use. (Like any conclusion that happens in a meeting, it may be revised if we encounter new evidence that changes our minds.)