-It’s not possible to remove all unsafety from this library without also removing some of the functionality. Still, at the cost of the `CloneAny` functionality and the raw interface, you can definitely remove all unsafe code. Here’s how you could do it:
-
-- Remove the genericness of it all (choose `dyn Any`, `dyn Any + Send` or `dyn Any + Send + Sync` and stick with it);
-- Merge `anymap::raw` into the normal interface, flattening it;
-- Change things like `.map(|any| unsafe { any.downcast_unchecked() })` to `.and_then(|any| any.downcast())` (performance cost: one extra superfluous type ID comparison, indirect).
-
-Yeah, the performance costs of going safe are quite small. The more serious matter is the loss of `Clone`.
-
-But frankly, if you wanted to do all this it’d be easier and faster to write it from scratch. The core of the library is actually really simple and perfectly safe, as can be seen in [`src/lib.rs` in the first commit](https://github.com/chris-morgan/anymap/tree/a294948f57dee47bb284d6a3ae1b8f61a902a03c/src/lib.rs) (note that that code won’t run without a few syntactic alterations; it was from well before Rust 1.0 and has things like `Any:'static` where now we have `Any + 'static`).