Not included in the build by default, since it's fragile and kludgy. Do something like this to run it: cd doc/tutorial RUSTC=../../build/stage2/bin/rustc bash test.sh Closes #1143
3.9 KiB
Functions
Functions (like all other static declarations, such as type
) can be
declared both at the top level and inside other functions (or modules,
which we'll come back to in moment).
The ret
keyword immediately returns from a function. It is
optionally followed by an expression to return. In functions that
return ()
, the returned expression can be left off. A function can
also return a value by having its top level block produce an
expression (by omitting the final semicolon).
Some functions (such as the C function exit
) never return normally.
In Rust, these are annotated with return type !
:
fn dead_end() -> ! { fail; }
This helps the compiler avoid spurious error messages. For example,
the following code would be a type error if dead_end
would be
expected to return.
# fn can_go_left() -> bool { true }
# fn can_go_right() -> bool { true }
# tag dir { left; right; }
# fn dead_end() -> ! { fail; }
let dir = if can_go_left() { left }
else if can_go_right() { right }
else { dead_end(); };
Closures
Normal Rust functions (declared with fn
) do not close over their
environment. A lambda
expression can be used to create a closure.
fn make_plus_function(x: int) -> lambda(int) -> int {
lambda(y: int) -> int { x + y }
}
let plus_two = make_plus_function(2);
assert plus_two(3) == 5;
A lambda
function copies its environment (in this case, the
binding for x
). It can not mutate the closed-over bindings, and will
not see changes made to these variables after the lambda
was
evaluated. lambda
s can be put in data structures and passed around
without limitation.
The type of a closure is lambda(args) -> type
, as opposed to
fn(args) -> type
. The fn
type stands for 'bare' functions, with no
closure attached. Keep this in mind when writing higher-order
functions.
A different form of closure is the block. Blocks are written like they
are in Ruby: {|x| x + y}
, the formal parameters between pipes,
followed by the function body. They are stack-allocated and properly
close over their environment (they see updates to closed over
variables, for example). But blocks can only be used in a limited set
of circumstances. They can be passed to other functions, but not
stored in data structures or returned.
fn map_int(f: block(int) -> int, vec: [int]) -> [int] {
let result = [];
for i in vec { result += [f(i)]; }
ret result;
}
map_int({|x| x + 1 }, [1, 2, 3]);
The type of blocks is spelled block(args) -> type
. Both closures and
bare functions are automatically convert to block
s when appropriate.
Most higher-order functions should take their function arguments as
block
s.
A block with no arguments is written {|| body(); }
—you can not leave
off the pipes.
Binding
Partial application is done using the bind
keyword in Rust.
let daynum = bind std::vec::position(_, ["mo", "tu", "we", "do",
"fr", "sa", "su"]);
Binding a function produces a closure (lambda
type) in which some of
the arguments to the bound function have already been provided.
daynum
will be a function taking a single string argument, and
returning the day of the week that string corresponds to (if any).
Iteration
Functions taking blocks provide a good way to define non-trivial iteration constructs. For example, this one iterates over a vector of integers backwards:
fn for_rev(v: [int], act: block(int)) {
let i = std::vec::len(v);
while (i > 0u) {
i -= 1u;
act(v[i]);
}
}
To run such an iteration, you could do this:
# fn for_rev(v: [int], act: block(int)) {}
for_rev([1, 2, 3], {|n| log n; });
But Rust allows a more pleasant syntax for this situation, with the loop block moved out of the parenthesis and the final semicolon omitted:
# fn for_rev(v: [int], act: block(int)) {}
for_rev([1, 2, 3]) {|n|
log n;
}