Rollup merge of #28743 - JanLikar:master, r=steveklabnik
- Expand the first paragraph - Improve readability by partitioning the chapter into the following sections: "Patterns", "Type annotations", "Mutability", and "Initializing bindings" - Add "Scope and shadowing" section (fix #28177) r? @steveklabnik
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@ -1,7 +1,8 @@
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% Variable Bindings
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Virtually every non-'Hello World’ Rust program uses *variable bindings*. They
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look like this:
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bind some value to a name, so it can be used later. `let` is
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used to introduce a binding, just like this:
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```rust
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fn main() {
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@ -13,10 +14,12 @@ Putting `fn main() {` in each example is a bit tedious, so we’ll leave that ou
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in the future. If you’re following along, make sure to edit your `main()`
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function, rather than leaving it off. Otherwise, you’ll get an error.
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In many languages, this is called a *variable*, but Rust’s variable bindings
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have a few tricks up their sleeves. For example the left-hand side of a `let`
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expression is a ‘[pattern][pattern]’, not just a variable name. This means we
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can do things like:
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# Patterns
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In many languages, a variable binding would be called a *variable*, but Rust’s
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variable bindings have a few tricks up their sleeves. For example the
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left-hand side of a `let` expression is a ‘[pattern][pattern]’, not just a
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variable name. This means we can do things like:
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```rust
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let (x, y) = (1, 2);
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@ -29,6 +32,8 @@ of our minds as we go forward.
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[pattern]: patterns.html
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# Type annotations
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Rust is a statically typed language, which means that we specify our types up
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front, and they’re checked at compile time. So why does our first example
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compile? Well, Rust has this thing called ‘type inference’. If it can figure
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@ -63,6 +68,8 @@ Note the similarities between this annotation and the syntax you use with
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occasionally include them to help you understand what the types that Rust
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infers are.
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# Mutability
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By default, bindings are *immutable*. This code will not compile:
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```rust,ignore
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@ -97,9 +104,11 @@ out of the scope of this guide. In general, you can often avoid explicit
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mutation, and so it is preferable in Rust. That said, sometimes, mutation is
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what you need, so it’s not verboten.
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Let’s get back to bindings. Rust variable bindings have one more aspect that
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differs from other languages: bindings are required to be initialized with a
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value before you're allowed to use them.
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# Initializing bindings
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Rust variable bindings have one more aspect that differs from other languages:
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bindings are required to be initialized with a value before you're allowed to
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use them.
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Let’s try it out. Change your `src/main.rs` file to look like this:
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@ -167,3 +176,77 @@ For now, we'll just stick to the default: integers aren't very complicated to
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print.
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[format]: ../std/fmt/index.html
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# Scope and shadowing
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Let’s get back to bindings. Variable bindings have a scope - they are
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constrained to live in a block they were defined in. A block is a collection
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of statements enclosed by `{` and `}`. Function definitions are also blocks!
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In the following example we define two variable bindings, `x` and `y`, which
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live in different blocks. `x` can be accessed from inside the `fn main() {}`
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block, while `y` can be accessed only from inside the inner block:
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```rust,ignore
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fn main() {
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let x: i32 = 17;
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{
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let y: i32 = 3;
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println!("The value of x is {} and value of y is {}", x, y);
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}
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println!("The value of x is {} and value of y is {}", x, y); // This won't work
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}
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```
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The first `println!` would print "The value of x is 17 and the value of y is
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3", but this example cannot be compiled successfully, because the second
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`println!` cannot access the value of `y`, since it is not in scope anymore.
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Instead we get this error:
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```bash
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$ cargo build
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Compiling hello v0.1.0 (file:///home/you/projects/hello_world)
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main.rs:7:62: 7:63 error: unresolved name `y`. Did you mean `x`? [E0425]
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main.rs:7 println!("The value of x is {} and value of y is {}", x, y); // This won't work
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^
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note: in expansion of format_args!
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<std macros>:2:25: 2:56 note: expansion site
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<std macros>:1:1: 2:62 note: in expansion of print!
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<std macros>:3:1: 3:54 note: expansion site
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<std macros>:1:1: 3:58 note: in expansion of println!
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main.rs:7:5: 7:65 note: expansion site
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main.rs:7:62: 7:63 help: run `rustc --explain E0425` to see a detailed explanation
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error: aborting due to previous error
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Could not compile `hello`.
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To learn more, run the command again with --verbose.
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```
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Additionaly, variable bindings can be shadowed. This means that a later
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variable binding with the same name as another binding, that's currently in
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scope, will override the previous binding.
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```rust
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let x: i32 = 8;
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{
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println!("{}", x); // Prints "8"
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let x = 12;
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println!("{}", x); // Prints "12"
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}
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println!("{}", x); // Prints "8"
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let x = 42;
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println!("{}", x); // Prints "42"
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```
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Shadowing and mutable bindings may appear as two sides of the same coin, but
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they are two distinct concepts that can't always be used interchangeably. For
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one, shadowing enables us to rebind a name to a value of a different type. It
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is also possible to change the mutability of a binding.
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```rust
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let mut x: i32 = 1;
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x = 7;
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let x = x; // x is now immutable and is bound to 7
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let y = 4;
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let y = "I can also be bound to text!"; // y is now of a different type
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```
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