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# Objective Make `StableInterpolate` "just work" on tuples whose parts are each `StableInterpolate` types. These types arise notably through `Curve::zip` (or just through explicit mapping of a similar form). It would otherwise be kind of frustrating to stumble upon such a thing and then realize that, e.g., automatic resampling just doesn't work, even though there is a very "obvious" way to do it. ## Solution Infer `StableInterpolate` on tuples of up to size 11. I can make that number bigger, if desired. Unfortunately, I don't think that our standard "fake variadics" tools actually work for this; the anonymous field accessors of tuples are `:tt` for purposes of macro expansion, which means that you can't simplify away the identifiers by doing something clever like using recursion (which would work if they were `:expr`). Maybe someone who knows some incredibly dark magic could chime in with a better solution. The expanded impls look like this: ```rust impl< T0: StableInterpolate, T1: StableInterpolate, T2: StableInterpolate, T3: StableInterpolate, T4: StableInterpolate, > StableInterpolate for (T0, T1, T2, T3, T4) { fn interpolate_stable(&self, other: &Self, t: f32) -> Self { ( <T0 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.0, &other.0, t), <T1 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.1, &other.1, t), <T2 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.2, &other.2, t), <T3 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.3, &other.3, t), <T4 as StableInterpolate>::interpolate_stable(&self.4, &other.4, t), ) } } ``` ## Testing Expanded macros; it compiles. ## Future Make a version of the fake variadics workflow that supports this kind of thing. |
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Cargo.toml | ||
clippy.toml | ||
README.md |