Rust does not have constructors as a language construct. Instead, the convention
is to use a static new
method to create an object.
// A Rust vector, see libcollections/vec.rs
pub struct Vec<T> {
buf: RawVec<T>,
len: usize,
}
impl<T> Vec<T> {
// Constructs a new, empty `Vec<T>`.
// Note this is a static method - no self.
// This constructor doesn't take any arguments, but some might in order to
// properly initialise an object
pub fn new() -> Vec<T> {
// Create a new Vec with fields properly initialised.
Vec {
// Note that here we are calling RawVec's constructor.
buf: RawVec::new(),
len: 0,
}
}
}
The builder pattern for constructing objects where there are multiple configurations.