What is the implementation for this function:
fn unbox<T>(value: Box<T>) -> T { // ??? } The only function in the documentation that looks like what I want is Box::into_raw. The following will type check:
fn unbox<T>(value: Box<T>) -> T { *value.into_raw() } This gives the error error[E0133]: dereference of raw pointer requires unsafe function or block. Wrapping it in an unsafe { ... } block fixes it.
fn unbox<T>(value: Box<T>) -> T { unsafe { *value.into_raw() } } Is this the correct implementation? If so, why is it unsafe? What does it mean?
Perhaps this question shows my general uncertainty of how Boxs actually work.
Dereference the value:
fn unbox<T>(value: Box<T>) -> T { *value } Way back in pre-1.0 Rust, heap-allocated values were very special types, and they used the sigil ~ (as in ~T). Along the road to Rust 1.0, most of this special-casing was removed... but not all of it.
This particular speciality goes by the name "deref move", and there's a proto-RFC about supporting it as a first-class concept. Until then, the answer is "because Box is special".
See also:
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