# The `Default` Trait ## Description Many types in Rust have a [constructor]. However, this is *specific* to the type; Rust cannot abstract over "everything that has a `new()` method". To allow this, the [`Default`] trait was conceived, which can be used with containers and other generic types (e.g. see [`Option::unwrap_or_default()`]). Notably, some containers already implement it where applicable. Not only do one-element containers like `Cow`, `Box` or `Arc` implement `Default` for contained `Default` types, one can automatically `#[derive(Default)]` for structs whose fields all implement it, so the more types implement `Default`, the more useful it becomes. On the other hand, constructors can take multiple arguments, while the `default()` method does not. There can even be multiple constructors with different names, but there can only be one `Default` implementation per type. ## Example ```rust // note that we can simply auto-derive Default here. #[derive(Default)] struct MyConfiguration { // Option defaults to None output: Option, // Vecs default to empty vector search_path: Vec, // Duration defaults to zero time timeout: Duration, // bool defaults to false check: bool, } impl MyConfiguration { // add setters here } ``` ## See also - The [constructor] idiom is another way to generate instances that may or may not be "default" - The [`Default`] documentation (scroll down for the list of implementors) - [`Option::unwrap_or_default()`] - [`derive(new)`] [constructor]: ctor.md [`Default`]: https://docs.rust-lang.org/doc/std/default/trait.Default.html [`Option::unwrap_or_default()`]: https://docs.rust-lang.org/doc/std/option/enum.Option.html#method.unwrap_or_default [`derive(new)`]: https://crates.io/crates/derive-new/