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Given the following struct and impl:

use std::slice::Iter;
use std::cell::RefCell;

struct Foo {
    bar: RefCell<Vec<u32>>,
}

impl Foo {
    pub fn iter(&self) -> Iter<u32> {
        self.bar.borrow().iter()
    }
}

fn main() {}

I get an error message about a lifetime issue:

error: borrowed value does not live long enough
  --> src/main.rs:9:9
   |
9  |         self.bar.borrow().iter()
   |         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ does not live long enough
10 |     }
   |     - temporary value only lives until here
   |
note: borrowed value must be valid for the anonymous lifetime #1 defined on the body at 8:36...
  --> src/main.rs:8:37
   |
8  |       pub fn iter(&self) -> Iter<u32> {
   |  _____________________________________^ starting here...
9  | |         self.bar.borrow().iter()
10 | |     }
   | |_____^ ...ending here

How am I able to return and use bars iterator?

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1 Answer

You cannot do this because it would allow you to circumvent runtime checks for uniqueness violations.

RefCell provides you a way to "defer" mutability exclusiveness checks to runtime, in exchange allowing mutation of the data it holds inside through shared references. This is done using RAII guards: you can obtain a guard object using a shared reference to RefCell, and then access the data inside RefCell using this guard object:

&'a RefCell<T>        -> Ref<'a, T> (with borrow) or RefMut<'a, T> (with borrow_mut)
&'b Ref<'a, T>        -> &'b T
&'b mut RefMut<'a, T> -> &'b mut T

The key point here is that 'b is different from 'a, which allows one to obtain &mut T references without having a &mut reference to the RefCell. However, these references will be linked to the guard instead and can't live longer than the guard. This is done intentionally: Ref and RefMut destructors toggle various flags inside their RefCell to force mutability checks and to force borrow() and borrow_mut() panic if these checks fail.

The simplest thing you can do is to return a wrapper around Ref, a reference to which would implement IntoIterator:

use std::cell::Ref;

struct VecRefWrapper<'a, T: 'a> {
    r: Ref<'a, Vec<T>>
}

impl<'a, 'b: 'a, T: 'a> IntoIterator for &'b VecRefWrapper<'a, T> {
    type IntoIter = Iter<'a, T>;
    type Item = &'a T;

    fn into_iter(self) -> Iter<'a, T> {
        self.r.iter()
    }
}

(try it on playground)

You can't implement IntoIterator for VecRefWrapper directly because then the internal Ref will be consumed by into_iter(), giving you essentially the same situation you're in now.


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