is a reference to something. That something is either a part of
self
, or a part of the static context. There is no other context because there is no runtime/GC. So there is no logical not-nonsensical scenario where this would be both a valid and a limiting situation in Rust. And this is why your surface analogy to Index
is invalid.
If the return value may depend on something other than self
or the static context, and still need to be reference-like, then the trait definition is wrong. It should either return a Cow
, or go for the obvious generalization of returning impl AsRef<Bar>
values. With that generalization, references, Cow
s, and more can be returned.
There is also the possibility that the trait definition is right, and you (the implementer) are trying to break a (probably) deliberate constraint (e.g. the return value in Index
being tied to ).
I would wager a guess that what you call an escape hatchet is considered a very bad C# style anyway (or will/should be). Just like how mutable statics are considered very bad in Rust 😉