73ea690016
Closes #2141
2630 lines
84 KiB
Markdown
2630 lines
84 KiB
Markdown
% Rust Language Tutorial
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# Introduction
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## Scope
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This is a tutorial for the Rust programming language. It assumes the
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reader is familiar with the basic concepts of programming, and has
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programmed in one or more other languages before. The tutorial covers
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the whole language, though not with the depth and precision of the
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[language reference](rust.html).
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## Disclaimer
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Rust is a language under development. The general flavor of the
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language has settled, but details will continue to change as it is
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further refined. Nothing in this tutorial is final, and though we try
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to keep it updated, it is possible that the text occasionally does not
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reflect the actual state of the language.
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## First Impressions
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Though syntax is something you get used to, an initial encounter with
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a language can be made easier if the notation looks familiar. Rust is
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a curly-brace language in the tradition of C, C++, and JavaScript.
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~~~~
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fn fac(n: int) -> int {
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let mut result = 1, i = 1;
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while i <= n {
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result *= i;
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i += 1;
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}
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ret result;
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}
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~~~~
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Several differences from C stand out. Types do not come before, but
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after variable names (preceded by a colon). In local variables
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(introduced with `let`), they are optional, and will be inferred when
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left off. Constructs like `while` and `if` do not require parentheses
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around the condition (though they allow them). Also, there's a
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tendency towards aggressive abbreviation in the keywords—`fn` for
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function, `ret` for return.
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You should, however, not conclude that Rust is simply an evolution of
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C. As will become clear in the rest of this tutorial, it goes in
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quite a different direction.
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## Conventions
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Throughout the tutorial, words that indicate language keywords or
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identifiers defined in the example code are displayed in `code font`.
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Code snippets are indented, and also shown in a monospaced font. Not
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all snippets constitute whole programs. For brevity, we'll often show
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fragments of programs that don't compile on their own. To try them
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out, you might have to wrap them in `fn main() { ... }`, and make sure
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they don't contain references to things that aren't actually defined.
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# Getting started
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## Installation
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The Rust compiler currently must be built from a [tarball][]. We hope
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to be distributing binary packages for various operating systems in
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the future.
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***Note:*** The Rust compiler is slightly unusual in that it is written
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in Rust and therefore must be built by a precompiled "snapshot" version
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of itself (made in an earlier state of development). As such, source
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builds require that:
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* You are connected to the internet, to fetch snapshots.
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* You can at least execute snapshot binaries of one of the forms we
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offer them in. Currently we build and test snapshots on:
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* Windows (7, server 2008 r2) x86 only
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* Linux 2.6.x (various distributions) x86 and x86-64
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* OSX 10.6 ("Snow leopard") or 10.7 ("Lion") x86 and x86-64
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You may find other platforms work, but these are our "tier 1" supported
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build environments that are most likely to work. Further platforms will
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be added to the list in the future via cross-compilation.
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To build from source you will also need the following prerequisite
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packages:
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* g++ 4.4 or clang++ 3.x
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* python 2.6 or later
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* perl 5.0 or later
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* gnu make 3.81 or later
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* curl
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Assuming you're on a relatively modern Linux system and have met the
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prerequisites, something along these lines should work. Building from source on
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Windows requires some extra steps: please see the
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[getting started][wiki-get-started] page on the Rust wiki.
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ wget http://dl.rust-lang.org/dist/rust-0.1.tar.gz
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$ tar -xzf rust-0.1.tar.gz
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$ cd rust-0.1
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$ ./configure
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$ make && make install
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~~~~
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You may need to use `sudo make install` if you do not normally have
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permission to modify the destination directory (either `/usr/local/bin`
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or the directory specified with to `configure` with `--prefix`).
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When complete, `make install` will place the following programs into
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`/usr/local/bin`:
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* `rustc`, the Rust compiler
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* `rustdoc`, the API-documentation tool
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* `cargo`, the Rust package manager
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In addition to a manual page under `/usr/local/share/man` and
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a set of host and target libraries under `/usr/local/lib/rustc`.
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The install locations can be adjusted by passing a `--prefix` argument
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to `configure`. Various other options are also supported, pass `--help`
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for more information on them.
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[wiki-get-started]: https://github.com/mozilla/rust/wiki/Doc-getting-started
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[tarball]: http://dl.rust-lang.org/dist/rust-0.1.tar.gz
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## Compiling your first program
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Rust program files are, by convention, given the extension `.rs`. Say
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we have a file `hello.rs` containing this program:
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~~~~
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fn main(args: [str]) {
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io::println("hello world from '" + args[0] + "'!");
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}
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~~~~
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If the Rust compiler was installed successfully, running `rustc
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hello.rs` will produce a binary called `hello` (or `hello.exe`).
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If you modify the program to make it invalid (for example, change the
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function to an unknown name), and then compile it, you'll see an error
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message like this:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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hello.rs:2:4: 2:16 error: unresolved name: io::print_it
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hello.rs:2 io::print_it("hello world from '" + args[0] + "'!");
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^~~~~~~~~~~~
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~~~~
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The Rust compiler tries to provide useful information when it runs
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into an error.
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## Anatomy of a Rust program
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In its simplest form, a Rust program is simply a `.rs` file with some
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types and functions defined in it. If it has a `main` function, it can
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be compiled to an executable. Rust does not allow code that's not a
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declaration to appear at the top level of the file—all statements must
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live inside a function.
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Rust programs can also be compiled as libraries, and included in other
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programs. The `use std` directive that appears at the top of a lot of
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examples imports the [standard library][std]. This is described in more
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detail [later on](#modules-and-crates).
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[std]: http://doc.rust-lang.org/doc/std
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## Editing Rust code
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There are Vim highlighting and indentation scripts in the Rust source
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distribution under `src/etc/vim/`, and an emacs mode under
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`src/etc/emacs/`.
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Other editors are not provided for yet. If you end up writing a Rust
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mode for your favorite editor, let us know so that we can link to it.
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# Syntax Basics
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## Braces
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Assuming you've programmed in any C-family language (C++, Java,
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JavaScript, C#, or PHP), Rust will feel familiar. The main surface
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difference to be aware of is that the bodies of `if` statements and of
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`while` loops *have* to be wrapped in brackets. Single-statement,
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bracket-less bodies are not allowed.
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If the verbosity of that bothers you, consider the fact that this
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allows you to omit the parentheses around the condition in `if`,
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`while`, and similar constructs. This will save you two characters
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every time. As a bonus, you no longer have to spend any mental energy
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on deciding whether you need to add braces or not, or on adding them
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after the fact when adding a statement to an `if` branch.
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Accounting for these differences, the surface syntax of Rust
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statements and expressions is C-like. Function calls are written
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`myfunc(arg1, arg2)`, operators have mostly the same name and
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precedence that they have in C, comments look the same, and constructs
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like `if` and `while` are available:
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~~~~
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# fn call_a_function(_a: int) {}
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fn main() {
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if 1 < 2 {
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while false { call_a_function(10 * 4); }
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} else if 4 < 3 || 3 < 4 {
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// Comments are C++-style too
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} else {
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/* Multi-line comment syntax */
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}
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}
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~~~~
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## Expression syntax
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Though it isn't apparent in all code, there is a fundamental
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difference between Rust's syntax and the predecessors in this family
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of languages. A lot of things that are statements in C are expressions
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in Rust. This allows for useless things like this (which passes
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nil—the void type—to a function):
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~~~~
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# fn a_function(_a: ()) {}
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a_function(while false {});
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~~~~
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But also useful things like this:
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~~~~
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# fn the_stars_align() -> bool { false }
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# fn something_else() -> bool { true }
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let x = if the_stars_align() { 4 }
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else if something_else() { 3 }
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else { 0 };
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~~~~
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This piece of code will bind the variable `x` to a value depending on
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the conditions. Note the condition bodies, which look like `{
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expression }`. The lack of a semicolon after the last statement in a
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braced block gives the whole block the value of that last expression.
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If the branches of the `if` had looked like `{ 4; }`, the above
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example would simply assign nil (void) to `x`. But without the
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semicolon, each branch has a different value, and `x` gets the value
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of the branch that was taken.
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This also works for function bodies. This function returns a boolean:
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~~~~
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fn is_four(x: int) -> bool { x == 4 }
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~~~~
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In short, everything that's not a declaration (`let` for variables,
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`fn` for functions, et cetera) is an expression.
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If all those things are expressions, you might conclude that you have
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to add a terminating semicolon after *every* statement, even ones that
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are not traditionally terminated with a semicolon in C (like `while`).
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That is not the case, though. Expressions that end in a block only
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need a semicolon if that block contains a trailing expression. `while`
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loops do not allow trailing expressions, and `if` statements tend to
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only have a trailing expression when you want to use their value for
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something—in which case you'll have embedded it in a bigger statement,
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like the `let x = ...` example above.
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## Identifiers
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Rust identifiers must start with an alphabetic character or an
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underscore, and after that may contain any alphanumeric character, and
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more underscores.
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NOTE: The parser doesn't currently recognize non-ascii alphabetic
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characters. This is a bug that will eventually be fixed.
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The double-colon (`::`) is used as a module separator, so
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`io::println` means 'the thing named `println` in the module
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named `io`.
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Rust will normally emit warnings about unused variables. These can be
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suppressed by using a variable name that starts with an underscore.
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~~~~
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fn this_warns(x: int) {}
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fn this_doesnt(_x: int) {}
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~~~~
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## Variable declaration
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The `let` keyword, as we've seen, introduces a local variable. Local
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variables are immutable by default: `let mut` can be used to introduce
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a local variable that can be reassigned. Global constants can be
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defined with `const`:
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~~~~
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use std;
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const repeat: uint = 5u;
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fn main() {
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let hi = "Hi!";
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let mut count = 0u;
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while count < repeat {
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io::println(hi);
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count += 1u;
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}
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}
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~~~~
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## Types
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The `-> bool` in the `is_four` example is the way a function's return
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type is written. For functions that do not return a meaningful value
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(these conceptually return nil in Rust), you can optionally say `->
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()` (`()` is how nil is written), but usually the return annotation is
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simply left off, as in the `fn main() { ... }` examples we've seen
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earlier.
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Every argument to a function must have its type declared (for example,
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`x: int`). Inside the function, type inference will be able to
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automatically deduce the type of most locals (generic functions, which
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we'll come back to later, will occasionally need additional
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annotation). Locals can be written either with or without a type
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annotation:
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~~~~
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// The type of this vector will be inferred based on its use.
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let x = [];
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# vec::map(x, fn&(&&_y:int) -> int { _y });
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// Explicitly say this is a vector of integers.
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let y: [int] = [];
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~~~~
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The basic types are written like this:
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`()`
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: Nil, the type that has only a single value.
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`bool`
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: Boolean type, with values `true` and `false`.
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`int`
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: A machine-pointer-sized integer.
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`uint`
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: A machine-pointer-sized unsigned integer.
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`i8`, `i16`, `i32`, `i64`
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: Signed integers with a specific size (in bits).
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`u8`, `u16`, `u32`, `u64`
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: Unsigned integers with a specific size.
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`f32`, `f64`
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: Floating-point types.
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`float`
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: The largest floating-point type efficiently supported on the target machine.
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`char`
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: A character is a 32-bit Unicode code point.
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`str`
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: String type. A string contains a UTF-8 encoded sequence of characters.
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These can be combined in composite types, which will be described in
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more detail later on (the `T`s here stand for any other type):
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`[T]`
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: Vector type.
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`[mut T]`
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: Mutable vector type.
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`(T1, T2)`
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: Tuple type. Any arity above 1 is supported.
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`{field1: T1, field2: T2}`
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: Record type.
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`fn(arg1: T1, arg2: T2) -> T3`, `fn@()`, `fn~()`, `fn&()`
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: Function types.
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`@T`, `~T`, `*T`
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: Pointer types.
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Types can be given names with `type` declarations:
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~~~~
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type monster_size = uint;
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~~~~
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This will provide a synonym, `monster_size`, for unsigned integers. It
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will not actually create a new type—`monster_size` and `uint` can be
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used interchangeably, and using one where the other is expected is not
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a type error. Read about [single-variant enums](#single_variant_enum)
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further on if you need to create a type name that's not just a
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synonym.
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## Literals
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Integers can be written in decimal (`144`), hexadecimal (`0x90`), and
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binary (`0b10010000`) base. Without a suffix, an integer literal is
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considered to be of type `int`. Add a `u` (`144u`) to make it a `uint`
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instead. Literals of the fixed-size integer types can be created by
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the literal with the type name (`255u8`, `50i64`, etc).
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Note that, in Rust, no implicit conversion between integer types
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happens. If you are adding one to a variable of type `uint`, you must
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type `v += 1u`—saying `+= 1` will give you a type error.
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Floating point numbers are written `0.0`, `1e6`, or `2.1e-4`. Without
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a suffix, the literal is assumed to be of type `float`. Suffixes `f32`
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and `f64` can be used to create literals of a specific type. The
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suffix `f` can be used to write `float` literals without a dot or
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exponent: `3f`.
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The nil literal is written just like the type: `()`. The keywords
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`true` and `false` produce the boolean literals.
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Character literals are written between single quotes, as in `'x'`. You
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may put non-ascii characters between single quotes (your source files
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should be encoded as UTF-8). Rust understands a number of
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character escapes, using the backslash character:
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`\n`
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: A newline (Unicode character 32).
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`\r`
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: A carriage return (13).
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`\t`
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: A tab character (9).
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`\\`, `\'`, `\"`
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: Simply escapes the following character.
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`\xHH`, `\uHHHH`, `\UHHHHHHHH`
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: Unicode escapes, where the `H` characters are the hexadecimal digits that
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form the character code.
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String literals allow the same escape sequences. They are written
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between double quotes (`"hello"`). Rust strings may contain newlines.
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When a newline is preceded by a backslash, it, and all white space
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following it, will not appear in the resulting string literal. So
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this is equivalent to `"abc"`:
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~~~~
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let s = "a\
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b\
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c";
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~~~~
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## Operators
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Rust's set of operators contains very few surprises. The main
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difference with C is that `++` and `--` are missing, and that the
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logical bitwise operators have higher precedence—in C, `x & 2 > 0`
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comes out as `x & (2 > 0)`, in Rust, it means `(x & 2) > 0`, which is
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more likely to be what you expect (unless you are a C veteran).
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Thus, binary arithmetic is done with `*`, `/`, `%`, `+`, and `-`
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(multiply, divide, remainder, plus, minus). `-` is also a unary prefix
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operator (there are no unary postfix operators in Rust) that does
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negation.
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Binary shifting is done with `>>` (shift right), `>>>` (arithmetic
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shift right), and `<<` (shift left). Logical bitwise operators are
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`&`, `|`, and `^` (and, or, and exclusive or), and unary `!` for
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bitwise negation (or boolean negation when applied to a boolean
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value).
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The comparison operators are the traditional `==`, `!=`, `<`, `>`,
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`<=`, and `>=`. Short-circuiting (lazy) boolean operators are written
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`&&` (and) and `||` (or).
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For type casting, Rust uses the binary `as` operator, which has a
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precedence between the bitwise combination operators (`&`, `|`, `^`)
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and the comparison operators. It takes an expression on the left side,
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and a type on the right side, and will, if a meaningful conversion
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exists, convert the result of the expression to the given type.
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~~~~
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let x: float = 4.0;
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let y: uint = x as uint;
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assert y == 4u;
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~~~~
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## Attributes
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Every definition can be annotated with attributes. Attributes are meta
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information that can serve a variety of purposes. One of those is
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conditional compilation:
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~~~~
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#[cfg(target_os = "win32")]
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fn register_win_service() { /* ... */ }
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~~~~
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This will cause the function to vanish without a trace during
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compilation on a non-Windows platform, much like `#ifdef` in C (it
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allows `cfg(flag=value)` and `cfg(flag)` forms, where the second
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simply checks whether the configuration flag is defined at all). Flags
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for `target_os` and `target_arch` are set by the compiler. It is
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possible to set additional flags with the `--cfg` command-line option.
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Attributes are always wrapped in hash-braces (`#[attr]`). Inside the
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braces, a small minilanguage is supported, whose interpretation
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depends on the attribute that's being used. The simplest form is a
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plain name (as in `#[test]`, which is used by the [built-in test
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framework](#testing)). A name-value pair can be provided using an `=`
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character followed by a literal (as in `#[license = "BSD"]`, which is
|
|
a valid way to annotate a Rust program as being released under a
|
|
BSD-style license). Finally, you can have a name followed by a
|
|
comma-separated list of nested attributes, as in the `cfg` example
|
|
above, or in this [crate](#modules-and-crates) metadata declaration:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
#[link(name = "std",
|
|
vers = "0.1",
|
|
url = "http://rust-lang.org/src/std")];
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
An attribute without a semicolon following it applies to the
|
|
definition that follows it. When terminated with a semicolon, it
|
|
applies to the module or crate in which it appears.
|
|
|
|
## Syntax extensions
|
|
|
|
There are plans to support user-defined syntax (macros) in Rust. This
|
|
currently only exists in very limited form.
|
|
|
|
The compiler defines a few built-in syntax extensions. The most useful
|
|
one is `#fmt`, a printf-style text formatting macro that is expanded
|
|
at compile time.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
io::println(#fmt("%s is %d", "the answer", 42));
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
`#fmt` supports most of the directives that [printf][pf] supports, but
|
|
will give you a compile-time error when the types of the directives
|
|
don't match the types of the arguments.
|
|
|
|
[pf]: http://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/io/c/fprintf
|
|
|
|
All syntax extensions look like `#word`. Another built-in one is
|
|
`#env`, which will look up its argument as an environment variable at
|
|
compile-time.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
io::println(#env("PATH"));
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# Control structures
|
|
|
|
## Conditionals
|
|
|
|
We've seen `if` pass by a few times already. To recap, braces are
|
|
compulsory, an optional `else` clause can be appended, and multiple
|
|
`if`/`else` constructs can be chained together:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
if false {
|
|
io::println("that's odd");
|
|
} else if true {
|
|
io::println("right");
|
|
} else {
|
|
io::println("neither true nor false");
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The condition given to an `if` construct *must* be of type boolean (no
|
|
implicit conversion happens). If the arms return a value, this value
|
|
must be of the same type for every arm in which control reaches the
|
|
end of the block:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn signum(x: int) -> int {
|
|
if x < 0 { -1 }
|
|
else if x > 0 { 1 }
|
|
else { ret 0; }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `ret` (return) and its semicolon could have been left out without
|
|
changing the meaning of this function, but it illustrates that you
|
|
will not get a type error in this case, although the last arm doesn't
|
|
have type `int`, because control doesn't reach the end of that arm
|
|
(`ret` is jumping out of the function).
|
|
|
|
## Pattern matching
|
|
|
|
Rust's `alt` construct is a generalized, cleaned-up version of C's
|
|
`switch` construct. You provide it with a value and a number of arms,
|
|
each labelled with a pattern, and it will execute the arm that matches
|
|
the value.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# let my_number = 1;
|
|
alt my_number {
|
|
0 { io::println("zero"); }
|
|
1 | 2 { io::println("one or two"); }
|
|
3 to 10 { io::println("three to ten"); }
|
|
_ { io::println("something else"); }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
There is no 'falling through' between arms, as in C—only one arm is
|
|
executed, and it doesn't have to explicitly `break` out of the
|
|
construct when it is finished.
|
|
|
|
The part to the left of each arm is called the pattern. Literals are
|
|
valid patterns, and will match only their own value. The pipe operator
|
|
(`|`) can be used to assign multiple patterns to a single arm. Ranges
|
|
of numeric literal patterns can be expressed with `to`. The underscore
|
|
(`_`) is a wildcard pattern that matches everything.
|
|
|
|
If the arm with the wildcard pattern was left off in the above
|
|
example, running it on a number greater than ten (or negative) would
|
|
cause a run-time failure. When no arm matches, `alt` constructs do not
|
|
silently fall through—they blow up instead.
|
|
|
|
A powerful application of pattern matching is *destructuring*, where
|
|
you use the matching to get at the contents of data types. Remember
|
|
that `(float, float)` is a tuple of two floats:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn angle(vec: (float, float)) -> float {
|
|
alt vec {
|
|
(0f, y) if y < 0f { 1.5 * float::consts::pi }
|
|
(0f, y) { 0.5 * float::consts::pi }
|
|
(x, y) { float::atan(y / x) }
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
A variable name in a pattern matches everything, *and* binds that name
|
|
to the value of the matched thing inside of the arm block. Thus, `(0f,
|
|
y)` matches any tuple whose first element is zero, and binds `y` to
|
|
the second element. `(x, y)` matches any tuple, and binds both
|
|
elements to a variable.
|
|
|
|
Any `alt` arm can have a guard clause (written `if EXPR`), which is
|
|
an expression of type `bool` that determines, after the pattern is
|
|
found to match, whether the arm is taken or not. The variables bound
|
|
by the pattern are available in this guard expression.
|
|
|
|
## Destructuring let
|
|
|
|
To a limited extent, it is possible to use destructuring patterns when
|
|
declaring a variable with `let`. For example, you can say this to
|
|
extract the fields from a tuple:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn get_tuple_of_two_ints() -> (int, int) { (1, 1) }
|
|
let (a, b) = get_tuple_of_two_ints();
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This will introduce two new variables, `a` and `b`, bound to the
|
|
content of the tuple.
|
|
|
|
You may only use irrevocable patterns—patterns that can never fail to
|
|
match—in let bindings, though. Things like literals, which only match
|
|
a specific value, are not allowed.
|
|
|
|
## Loops
|
|
|
|
`while` produces a loop that runs as long as its given condition
|
|
(which must have type `bool`) evaluates to true. Inside a loop, the
|
|
keyword `break` can be used to abort the loop, and `cont` can be used
|
|
to abort the current iteration and continue with the next.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let mut x = 5;
|
|
while true {
|
|
x += x - 3;
|
|
if x % 5 == 0 { break; }
|
|
io::println(int::str(x));
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This code prints out a weird sequence of numbers and stops as soon as
|
|
it finds one that can be divided by five.
|
|
|
|
There's also `while`'s ugly cousin, `do`/`while`, which does not check
|
|
its condition on the first iteration, using traditional syntax:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn eat_cake() {}
|
|
# fn any_cake_left() -> bool { false }
|
|
do {
|
|
eat_cake();
|
|
} while any_cake_left();
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
For more involved iteration, such as going over the elements of a
|
|
collection, Rust uses higher-order functions. We'll come back to those
|
|
in a moment.
|
|
|
|
## Failure
|
|
|
|
The `fail` keyword causes the current [task](#tasks) to fail. You use
|
|
it to indicate unexpected failure, much like you'd use `exit(1)` in a
|
|
C program, except that in Rust, it is possible for other tasks to
|
|
handle the failure, allowing the program to continue running.
|
|
|
|
`fail` takes an optional argument, which must have type `str`. Trying
|
|
to access a vector out of bounds, or running a pattern match with no
|
|
matching clauses, both result in the equivalent of a `fail`.
|
|
|
|
## Logging
|
|
|
|
Rust has a built-in logging mechanism, using the `log` statement.
|
|
Logging is polymorphic—any type of value can be logged, and the
|
|
runtime will do its best to output a textual representation of the
|
|
value.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
log(warn, "hi");
|
|
log(error, (1, [2.5, -1.8]));
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The first argument is the log level (levels `debug`, `info`, `warn`,
|
|
and `error` are predefined), and the second is the value to log. By
|
|
default, you *will not* see the output of that first log statement,
|
|
which has `warn` level. The environment variable `RUST_LOG` controls
|
|
which log level is used. It can contain a comma-separated list of
|
|
paths for modules that should be logged. For example, running `rustc`
|
|
with `RUST_LOG=rustc::front::attr` will turn on logging in its
|
|
attribute parser. If you compile a program named `foo.rs`, its
|
|
top-level module will be called `foo`, and you can set `RUST_LOG` to
|
|
`foo` to enable `warn`, `info` and `debug` logging for the module.
|
|
|
|
Turned-off `log` statements impose minimal overhead on the code that
|
|
contains them, so except in code that needs to be really, really fast,
|
|
you should feel free to scatter around debug logging statements, and
|
|
leave them in.
|
|
|
|
Three macros that combine text-formatting (as with `#fmt`) and logging
|
|
are available. These take a string and any number of format arguments,
|
|
and will log the formatted string:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn get_error_string() -> str { "boo" }
|
|
#warn("only %d seconds remaining", 10);
|
|
#error("fatal: %s", get_error_string());
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Assertions
|
|
|
|
The keyword `assert`, followed by an expression with boolean type,
|
|
will check that the given expression results in `true`, and cause a
|
|
failure otherwise. It is typically used to double-check things that
|
|
*should* hold at a certain point in a program.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let mut x = 100;
|
|
while (x > 10) { x -= 10; }
|
|
assert x == 10;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
# 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 the pseudo-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 }
|
|
# enum dir { left, right }
|
|
# fn dead_end() -> ! { fail; }
|
|
let dir = if can_go_left() { left }
|
|
else if can_go_right() { right }
|
|
else { dead_end(); };
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Closures
|
|
|
|
Named functions, like those in the previous section, do not close over
|
|
their environment. Rust also includes support for closures, which are
|
|
functions that can access variables in the scope in which they are
|
|
created.
|
|
|
|
There are several forms of closures, each with its own role. The most
|
|
common type is called a 'stack closure'; this is a closure which has
|
|
full access to its environment.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn call_closure_with_ten(b: fn(int)) { b(10); }
|
|
|
|
let x = 20;
|
|
call_closure_with_ten({|arg|
|
|
#info("x=%d, arg=%d", x, arg);
|
|
});
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This defines a function that accepts a closure, and then calls it with
|
|
a simple stack closure that executes a log statement, accessing both
|
|
its argument and the variable `x` from its environment.
|
|
|
|
Stack closures are called stack closures because they directly access
|
|
the stack frame in which they are created. This makes them very
|
|
lightweight to construct and lets them modify local variables from the
|
|
enclosing scope, but it also makes it unsafe for the closure to
|
|
survive the scope in which it was created. To prevent them from being
|
|
used after the creating scope has returned, stack closures can only be
|
|
used in a restricted way: they are allowed to appear in function
|
|
argument position and in call position, but nowhere else.
|
|
|
|
### Boxed closures
|
|
|
|
When you need to store a closure in a data structure, a stack closure
|
|
will not do, since the compiler will refuse to let you store it. For
|
|
this purpose, Rust provides a type of closure that has an arbitrary
|
|
lifetime, written `fn@` (boxed closure, analogous to the `@` pointer
|
|
type described in the next section).
|
|
|
|
A boxed closure does not directly access its environment, but merely
|
|
copies out the values that it closes over into a private data
|
|
structure. This means that it can not assign to these variables, and
|
|
will not 'see' updates to them.
|
|
|
|
This code creates a closure that adds a given string to its argument,
|
|
returns it from a function, and then calls it:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
use std;
|
|
|
|
fn mk_appender(suffix: str) -> fn@(str) -> str {
|
|
let f = fn@(s: str) -> str { s + suffix };
|
|
ret f;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
let shout = mk_appender("!");
|
|
io::println(shout("hey ho, let's go"));
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
### Closure compatibility
|
|
|
|
A nice property of Rust closures is that you can pass any kind of
|
|
closure (as long as the arguments and return types match) to functions
|
|
that expect a `fn()`. Thus, when writing a higher-order function that
|
|
wants to do nothing with its function argument beyond calling it, you
|
|
should almost always specify the type of that argument as `fn()`, so
|
|
that callers have the flexibility to pass whatever they want.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn call_twice(f: fn()) { f(); f(); }
|
|
call_twice({|| "I am a stack closure"; });
|
|
call_twice(fn@() { "I am a boxed closure"; });
|
|
fn bare_function() { "I am a plain function"; }
|
|
call_twice(bare_function);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
### Unique closures
|
|
|
|
Unique closures, written `fn~` in analogy to the `~` pointer type (see
|
|
next section), hold on to things that can safely be sent between
|
|
processes. They copy the values they close over, much like boxed
|
|
closures, but they also 'own' them—meaning no other code can access
|
|
them. Unique closures mostly exist for spawning new [tasks](#tasks).
|
|
|
|
### Shorthand syntax
|
|
|
|
The compact syntax used for stack closures (`{|arg1, arg2| body}`) can
|
|
also be used to express boxed and unique closures in situations where
|
|
the closure style can be unambiguously derived from the context. Most
|
|
notably, when calling a higher-order function you do not have to use
|
|
the long-hand syntax for the function you're passing, since the
|
|
compiler can look at the argument type to find out what the parameter
|
|
types are.
|
|
|
|
As a further simplification, if the final parameter to a function is a
|
|
closure, the closure need not be placed within parentheses. You could,
|
|
for example, write...
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let doubled = vec::map([1, 2, 3]) {|x| x*2};
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
`vec::map` is a function in the core library that applies its last
|
|
argument to every element of a vector, producing a new vector.
|
|
|
|
Even when a closure takes no parameters, you must still write the bars
|
|
for the parameter list, as in `{|| ...}`.
|
|
|
|
## Binding
|
|
|
|
Partial application is done using the `bind` keyword in Rust.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let daynum = bind vec::position_elem(["mo", "tu", "we", "th",
|
|
"fr", "sa", "su"], _);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Binding a function produces a boxed closure (`fn@` 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 closures 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: fn(int)) {
|
|
let mut i = 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: fn(int)) {}
|
|
for_rev([1, 2, 3], {|n| log(error, n); });
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Making use of the shorthand where a final closure argument can be
|
|
moved outside of the parentheses permits the following, which
|
|
looks quite like a normal loop:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn for_rev(v: [int], act: fn(int)) {}
|
|
for_rev([1, 2, 3]) {|n|
|
|
log(error, n);
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Note that, because `for_rev()` returns unit type, no semicolon is
|
|
needed when the final closure is pulled outside of the parentheses.
|
|
|
|
# For loops
|
|
|
|
To allow breaking out of loops, many iteration functions, such as
|
|
`vec::each`, take a function that returns a boolean, and can return
|
|
`false` to break off iteration.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
vec::each([2, 4, 8, 5, 16]) {|n|
|
|
if n % 2 != 0 {
|
|
io::println("found odd number!");
|
|
false
|
|
} else { true }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You can see how that gets noisy. As a syntactic convenience, if the
|
|
call is preceded by the keyword `for`, the block will implicitly
|
|
return `true`, and `break` and `cont` can be used, much like in a
|
|
`while` loop, to explicitly return `false` or `true`.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
for vec::each([2, 4, 8, 5, 16]) {|n|
|
|
if n % 2 != 0 {
|
|
io::println("found odd number!");
|
|
break;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
As an added bonus, you can use the `ret` keyword, which is not
|
|
normally allowed in blocks, in a block that appears as the body of a
|
|
`for` loop — this will cause a return to happen from the outer
|
|
function, not just the loop body.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn contains(v: [int], elt: int) -> bool {
|
|
for vec::each(v) {|x|
|
|
if (x == elt) { ret true; }
|
|
}
|
|
false
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
# Datatypes
|
|
|
|
Rust datatypes are, by default, immutable. The core datatypes of Rust
|
|
are structural records and 'enums' (tagged unions, algebraic data
|
|
types).
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type point = {x: float, y: float};
|
|
enum shape {
|
|
circle(point, float),
|
|
rectangle(point, point)
|
|
}
|
|
let my_shape = circle({x: 0.0, y: 0.0}, 10.0);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Records
|
|
|
|
Rust record types are written `{field1: TYPE, field2: TYPE [, ...]}`,
|
|
and record literals are written in the same way, but with expressions
|
|
instead of types. They are quite similar to C structs, and even laid
|
|
out the same way in memory (so you can read from a Rust struct in C,
|
|
and vice-versa).
|
|
|
|
The dot operator is used to access record fields (`mypoint.x`).
|
|
|
|
Fields that you want to mutate must be explicitly marked as such. For
|
|
example...
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type stack = {content: [int], mut head: uint};
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
With such a type, you can do `mystack.head += 1u`. If `mut` were
|
|
omitted from the type, such an assignment would result in a type
|
|
error.
|
|
|
|
To 'update' an immutable record, you use functional record update
|
|
syntax, by ending a record literal with the keyword `with`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let oldpoint = {x: 10f, y: 20f};
|
|
let newpoint = {x: 0f with oldpoint};
|
|
assert newpoint == {x: 0f, y: 20f};
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This will create a new struct, copying all the fields from `oldpoint`
|
|
into it, except for the ones that are explicitly set in the literal.
|
|
|
|
Rust record types are *structural*. This means that `{x: float, y:
|
|
float}` is not just a way to define a new type, but is the actual name
|
|
of the type. Record types can be used without first defining them. If
|
|
module A defines `type point = {x: float, y: float}`, and module B,
|
|
without knowing anything about A, defines a function that returns an
|
|
`{x: float, y: float}`, you can use that return value as a `point` in
|
|
module A. (Remember that `type` defines an additional name for a type,
|
|
not an actual new type.)
|
|
|
|
## Record patterns
|
|
|
|
Records can be destructured in `alt` patterns. The basic syntax is
|
|
`{fieldname: pattern, ...}`, but the pattern for a field can be
|
|
omitted as a shorthand for simply binding the variable with the same
|
|
name as the field.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# let mypoint = {x: 0f, y: 0f};
|
|
alt mypoint {
|
|
{x: 0f, y: y_name} { /* Provide sub-patterns for fields */ }
|
|
{x, y} { /* Simply bind the fields */ }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The field names of a record do not have to appear in a pattern in the
|
|
same order they appear in the type. When you are not interested in all
|
|
the fields of a record, a record pattern may end with `, _` (as in
|
|
`{field1, _}`) to indicate that you're ignoring all other fields.
|
|
|
|
## Enums
|
|
|
|
Enums are datatypes that have several different representations. For
|
|
example, the type shown earlier:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# type point = {x: float, y: float};
|
|
enum shape {
|
|
circle(point, float),
|
|
rectangle(point, point)
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
A value of this type is either a circle, in which case it contains a
|
|
point record and a float, or a rectangle, in which case it contains
|
|
two point records. The run-time representation of such a value
|
|
includes an identifier of the actual form that it holds, much like the
|
|
'tagged union' pattern in C, but with better ergonomics.
|
|
|
|
The above declaration will define a type `shape` that can be used to
|
|
refer to such shapes, and two functions, `circle` and `rectangle`,
|
|
which can be used to construct values of the type (taking arguments of
|
|
the specified types). So `circle({x: 0f, y: 0f}, 10f)` is the way to
|
|
create a new circle.
|
|
|
|
Enum variants do not have to have parameters. This, for example, is
|
|
equivalent to a C enum:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
enum direction {
|
|
north,
|
|
east,
|
|
south,
|
|
west
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This will define `north`, `east`, `south`, and `west` as constants,
|
|
all of which have type `direction`.
|
|
|
|
When the enum is C like, that is none of the variants have parameters,
|
|
it is possible to explicitly set the discriminator values to an integer
|
|
value:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
enum color {
|
|
red = 0xff0000,
|
|
green = 0x00ff00,
|
|
blue = 0x0000ff
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
If an explicit discriminator is not specified for a variant, the value
|
|
defaults to the value of the previous variant plus one. If the first
|
|
variant does not have a discriminator, it defaults to 0. For example,
|
|
the value of `north` is 0, `east` is 1, etc.
|
|
|
|
When an enum is C-like the `as` cast operator can be used to get the
|
|
discriminator's value.
|
|
|
|
<a name="single_variant_enum"></a>
|
|
|
|
There is a special case for enums with a single variant. These are
|
|
used to define new types in such a way that the new name is not just a
|
|
synonym for an existing type, but its own distinct type. If you say:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
enum gizmo_id = int;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
That is a shorthand for this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
enum gizmo_id { gizmo_id(int) }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Enum types like this can have their content extracted with the
|
|
dereference (`*`) unary operator:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# enum gizmo_id = int;
|
|
let my_gizmo_id = gizmo_id(10);
|
|
let id_int: int = *my_gizmo_id;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Enum patterns
|
|
|
|
For enum types with multiple variants, destructuring is the only way to
|
|
get at their contents. All variant constructors can be used as
|
|
patterns, as in this definition of `area`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# type point = {x: float, y: float};
|
|
# enum shape { circle(point, float), rectangle(point, point) }
|
|
fn area(sh: shape) -> float {
|
|
alt sh {
|
|
circle(_, size) { float::consts::pi * size * size }
|
|
rectangle({x, y}, {x: x2, y: y2}) { (x2 - x) * (y2 - y) }
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Another example, matching nullary enum variants:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# type point = {x: float, y: float};
|
|
# enum direction { north, east, south, west }
|
|
fn point_from_direction(dir: direction) -> point {
|
|
alt dir {
|
|
north { {x: 0f, y: 1f} }
|
|
east { {x: 1f, y: 0f} }
|
|
south { {x: 0f, y: -1f} }
|
|
west { {x: -1f, y: 0f} }
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Tuples
|
|
|
|
Tuples in Rust behave exactly like records, except that their fields
|
|
do not have names (and can thus not be accessed with dot notation).
|
|
Tuples can have any arity except for 0 or 1 (though you may see nil,
|
|
`()`, as the empty tuple if you like).
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let mytup: (int, int, float) = (10, 20, 30.0);
|
|
alt mytup {
|
|
(a, b, c) { log(info, a + b + (c as int)); }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Pointers
|
|
|
|
In contrast to a lot of modern languages, record and enum types in
|
|
Rust are not represented as pointers to allocated memory. They are,
|
|
like in C and C++, represented directly. This means that if you `let x
|
|
= {x: 1f, y: 1f};`, you are creating a record on the stack. If you
|
|
then copy it into a data structure, the whole record is copied, not
|
|
just a pointer.
|
|
|
|
For small records like `point`, this is usually more efficient than
|
|
allocating memory and going through a pointer. But for big records, or
|
|
records with mutable fields, it can be useful to have a single copy on
|
|
the heap, and refer to that through a pointer.
|
|
|
|
Rust supports several types of pointers. The simplest is the unsafe
|
|
pointer, written `*TYPE`, which is a completely unchecked pointer
|
|
type only used in unsafe code (and thus, in typical Rust code, very
|
|
rarely). The safe pointer types are `@TYPE` for shared,
|
|
reference-counted boxes, and `~TYPE`, for uniquely-owned pointers.
|
|
|
|
All pointer types can be dereferenced with the `*` unary operator.
|
|
|
|
### Shared boxes
|
|
|
|
Shared boxes are pointers to heap-allocated, reference counted memory.
|
|
A cycle collector ensures that circular references do not result in
|
|
memory leaks.
|
|
|
|
Creating a shared box is done by simply applying the unary `@`
|
|
operator to an expression. The result of the expression will be boxed,
|
|
resulting in a box of the right type. For example:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let x = @10; // New box, refcount of 1
|
|
let y = x; // Copy the pointer, increase refcount
|
|
// When x and y go out of scope, refcount goes to 0, box is freed
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
NOTE: We may in the future switch to garbage collection, rather than
|
|
reference counting, for shared boxes.
|
|
|
|
Shared boxes never cross task boundaries.
|
|
|
|
### Unique boxes
|
|
|
|
In contrast to shared boxes, unique boxes are not reference counted.
|
|
Instead, it is statically guaranteed that only a single owner of the
|
|
box exists at any time.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let x = ~10;
|
|
let y <- x;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This is where the 'move' (`<-`) operator comes in. It is similar to
|
|
`=`, but it de-initializes its source. Thus, the unique box can move
|
|
from `x` to `y`, without violating the constraint that it only has a
|
|
single owner (if you used assignment instead of the move operator, the
|
|
box would, in principle, be copied).
|
|
|
|
Unique boxes, when they do not contain any shared boxes, can be sent
|
|
to other tasks. The sending task will give up ownership of the box,
|
|
and won't be able to access it afterwards. The receiving task will
|
|
become the sole owner of the box.
|
|
|
|
### Mutability
|
|
|
|
All pointer types have a mutable variant, written `@mut TYPE` or
|
|
`~mut TYPE`. Given such a pointer, you can write to its contents
|
|
by combining the dereference operator with a mutating action.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn increase_contents(pt: @mut int) {
|
|
*pt += 1;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Vectors
|
|
|
|
Rust vectors are always heap-allocated and unique. A value of type
|
|
`[TYPE]` is represented by a pointer to a section of heap memory
|
|
containing any number of `TYPE` values.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: This uniqueness is turning out to be quite awkward in practice,
|
|
and might change in the future.
|
|
|
|
Vector literals are enclosed in square brackets. Dereferencing is done
|
|
with square brackets (zero-based):
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let myvec = [true, false, true, false];
|
|
if myvec[1] { io::println("boom"); }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
By default, vectors are immutable—you can not replace their elements.
|
|
The type written as `[mut TYPE]` is a vector with mutable
|
|
elements. Mutable vector literals are written `[mut]` (empty) or
|
|
`[mut 1, 2, 3]` (with elements).
|
|
|
|
The `+` operator means concatenation when applied to vector types.
|
|
Growing a vector in Rust is not as inefficient as it looks :
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let mut myvec = [], i = 0;
|
|
while i < 100 {
|
|
myvec += [i];
|
|
i += 1;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Because a vector is unique, replacing it with a longer one (which is
|
|
what `+= [i]` does) is indistinguishable from appending to it
|
|
in-place. Vector representations are optimized to grow
|
|
logarithmically, so the above code generates about the same amount of
|
|
copying and reallocation as `push` implementations in most other
|
|
languages.
|
|
|
|
## Strings
|
|
|
|
The `str` type in Rust is represented exactly the same way as a vector
|
|
of bytes (`[u8]`), except that it is guaranteed to have a trailing
|
|
null byte (for interoperability with C APIs).
|
|
|
|
This sequence of bytes is interpreted as an UTF-8 encoded sequence of
|
|
characters. This has the advantage that UTF-8 encoded I/O (which
|
|
should really be the default for modern systems) is very fast, and
|
|
that strings have, for most intents and purposes, a nicely compact
|
|
representation. It has the disadvantage that you only get
|
|
constant-time access by byte, not by character.
|
|
|
|
A lot of algorithms don't need constant-time indexed access (they
|
|
iterate over all characters, which `str::chars` helps with), and
|
|
for those that do, many don't need actual characters, and can operate
|
|
on bytes. For algorithms that do really need to index by character,
|
|
there's the option to convert your string to a character vector (using
|
|
`str::chars`).
|
|
|
|
Like vectors, strings are always unique. You can wrap them in a shared
|
|
box to share them. Unlike vectors, there is no mutable variant of
|
|
strings. They are always immutable.
|
|
|
|
## Resources
|
|
|
|
Resources are data types that have a destructor associated with them.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn close_file_desc(x: int) {}
|
|
resource file_desc(fd: int) {
|
|
close_file_desc(fd);
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This defines a type `file_desc` and a constructor of the same name,
|
|
which takes an integer. The type has an associated destructor procedure,
|
|
whose contents are specified by the block. Values of such a type can not
|
|
be copied, and when they are destroyed (by going out of scope, or, when
|
|
boxed, when their box is cleaned up), their body runs. In the example
|
|
above, this would cause the given file descriptor to be closed.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: We're considering alternative approaches for data types with
|
|
destructors. Resources might go away in the future.
|
|
|
|
# Argument passing
|
|
|
|
Rust datatypes are not trivial to copy (the way, for example,
|
|
JavaScript values can be copied by simply taking one or two machine
|
|
words and plunking them somewhere else). Shared boxes require
|
|
reference count updates, big records, enums, or unique pointers require
|
|
an arbitrary amount of data to be copied (plus updating the reference
|
|
counts of shared boxes hanging off them).
|
|
|
|
For this reason, the default calling convention for Rust functions
|
|
leaves ownership of the arguments with the caller. The caller
|
|
guarantees that the arguments will outlive the call, the callee merely
|
|
gets access to them.
|
|
|
|
## Safe references
|
|
|
|
There is one catch with this approach: sometimes the compiler can
|
|
*not* statically guarantee that the argument value at the caller side
|
|
will survive to the end of the call. Another argument might indirectly
|
|
refer to it and be used to overwrite it, or a closure might assign a
|
|
new value to it.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately, Rust tasks are single-threaded worlds, which share no
|
|
data with other tasks, and most data is immutable. This allows most
|
|
argument-passing situations to be proved safe without further
|
|
difficulty.
|
|
|
|
Take the following program:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn get_really_big_record() -> int { 1 }
|
|
# fn myfunc(a: int) {}
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
let x = get_really_big_record();
|
|
myfunc(x);
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Here we know for sure that no one else has access to the `x` variable
|
|
in `main`, so we're good. But the call could also look like this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn myfunc(a: int, b: fn()) {}
|
|
# fn get_another_record() -> int { 1 }
|
|
# let mut x = 1;
|
|
myfunc(x, {|| x = get_another_record(); });
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Now, if `myfunc` first calls its second argument and then accesses its
|
|
first argument, it will see a different value from the one that was
|
|
passed to it.
|
|
|
|
In such a case, the compiler will insert an implicit copy of `x`,
|
|
*except* if `x` contains something mutable, in which case a copy would
|
|
result in code that behaves differently. If copying `x` might be
|
|
expensive (for example, if it holds a vector), the compiler will emit
|
|
a warning.
|
|
|
|
There are even more tricky cases, in which the Rust compiler is forced
|
|
to pessimistically assume a value will get mutated, even though it is
|
|
not sure.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn for_each(v: [mut @int], iter: fn(@int)) {
|
|
for v.each {|elt| iter(elt); }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
For all this function knows, calling `iter` (which is a closure that
|
|
might have access to the vector that's passed as `v`) could cause the
|
|
elements in the vector to be mutated, with the effect that it can not
|
|
guarantee that the boxes will live for the duration of the call. So it
|
|
has to copy them. In this case, this will happen implicitly (bumping a
|
|
reference count is considered cheap enough to not warn about it).
|
|
|
|
## The copy operator
|
|
|
|
If the `for_each` function given above were to take a vector of
|
|
`{mut a: int}` instead of `@int`, it would not be able to
|
|
implicitly copy, since if the `iter` function changes a copy of a
|
|
mutable record, the changes won't be visible in the record itself. If
|
|
we *do* want to allow copies there, we have to explicitly allow it
|
|
with the `copy` operator:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type mutrec = {mut x: int};
|
|
fn for_each(v: [mut mutrec], iter: fn(mutrec)) {
|
|
for v.each {|elt| iter(copy elt); }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Adding a `copy` operator is also the way to muffle warnings about
|
|
implicit copies.
|
|
|
|
## Other uses of safe references
|
|
|
|
Safe references are not only used for argument passing. When you
|
|
destructure on a value in an `alt` expression, or loop over a vector
|
|
with `for`, variables bound to the inside of the given data structure
|
|
will use safe references, not copies. This means such references are
|
|
very cheap, but you'll occasionally have to copy them to ensure
|
|
safety.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let mut my_rec = {a: 4, b: [1, 2, 3]};
|
|
alt my_rec {
|
|
{a, b} {
|
|
log(info, b); // This is okay
|
|
my_rec = {a: a + 1, b: b + [a]};
|
|
log(info, b); // Here reference b has become invalid
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Argument passing styles
|
|
|
|
The fact that arguments are conceptually passed by safe reference does
|
|
not mean all arguments are passed by pointer. Composite types like
|
|
records and enums *are* passed by pointer, but single-word values, like
|
|
integers and pointers, are simply passed by value. Most of the time,
|
|
the programmer does not have to worry about this, as the compiler will
|
|
simply pick the most efficient passing style. There is one exception,
|
|
which will be described in the section on [generics](#generics).
|
|
|
|
To explicitly set the passing-style for a parameter, you prefix the
|
|
argument name with a sigil. There are two special passing styles that
|
|
are often useful. The first is by-mutable-pointer, written with a
|
|
single `&`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn vec_push(&v: [int], elt: int) {
|
|
v += [elt];
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This allows the function to mutate the value of the argument, *in the
|
|
caller's context*. Clearly, you are only allowed to pass things that
|
|
can actually be mutated to such a function.
|
|
|
|
Then there is the by-copy style, written `+`. This indicates that the
|
|
function wants to take ownership of the argument value. If the caller
|
|
does not use the argument after the call, it will be 'given' to the
|
|
callee. Otherwise a copy will be made. This mode is mostly used for
|
|
functions that construct data structures. The argument will end up
|
|
being owned by the data structure, so if that can be done without a
|
|
copy, that's a win.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type person = {name: str, address: str};
|
|
fn make_person(+name: str, +address: str) -> person {
|
|
ret {name: name, address: address};
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Finally there is by-move style, written `-`. This indicates that the
|
|
function will take ownership of the argument, like with by-copy style,
|
|
but a copy must not be made. The caller is (statically) obliged to not
|
|
use the argument after the call; it is de-initialized as part of the
|
|
call. This is used to support ownership-passing in the presence of
|
|
non-copyable types.
|
|
|
|
# Generics
|
|
|
|
## Generic functions
|
|
|
|
Throughout this tutorial, I've been defining functions like `for_rev`
|
|
that act only on integers. It is 2012, and we no longer expect to be
|
|
defining such functions again and again for every type they apply to.
|
|
Thus, Rust allows functions and datatypes to have type parameters.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn for_rev<T>(v: [T], act: fn(T)) {
|
|
let mut i = vec::len(v);
|
|
while i > 0u {
|
|
i -= 1u;
|
|
act(v[i]);
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn map<T, U>(v: [T], f: fn(T) -> U) -> [U] {
|
|
let mut acc = [];
|
|
for v.each {|elt| acc += [f(elt)]; }
|
|
ret acc;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
When defined in this way, these functions can be applied to any type
|
|
of vector, as long as the type of the closure's argument and the type of
|
|
the vector's content agree with each other.
|
|
|
|
Inside a parameterized (generic) function, the names of the type
|
|
parameters (capitalized by convention) stand for opaque types. You
|
|
can't look inside them, but you can pass them around.
|
|
|
|
## Generic datatypes
|
|
|
|
Generic `type` and `enum` declarations follow the same pattern:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type circular_buf<T> = {start: uint,
|
|
end: uint,
|
|
buf: [mut T]};
|
|
|
|
enum option<T> { some(T), none }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You can then declare a function to take a `circular_buf<u8>` or return
|
|
an `option<str>`, or even an `option<T>` if the function itself is
|
|
generic.
|
|
|
|
The `option` type given above exists in the core library and is the
|
|
way Rust programs express the thing that in C would be a nullable
|
|
pointer. The nice part is that you have to explicitly unpack an
|
|
`option` type, so accidental null pointer dereferences become
|
|
impossible.
|
|
|
|
## Type-inference and generics
|
|
|
|
Rust's type inferrer works very well with generics, but there are
|
|
programs that just can't be typed.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let n = option::none;
|
|
# option::iter(n, fn&(&&x:int) {})
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
If you never do anything else with `n`, the compiler will not be able
|
|
to assign a type to it. (The same goes for `[]`, the empty vector.) If
|
|
you really want to have such a statement, you'll have to write it like
|
|
this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let n2: option<int> = option::none;
|
|
// or
|
|
let n = option::none::<int>;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Note that, in a value expression, `<` already has a meaning as a
|
|
comparison operator, so you'll have to write `::<T>` to explicitly
|
|
give a type to a name that denotes a generic value. Fortunately, this
|
|
is rarely necessary.
|
|
|
|
## Polymorphic built-ins
|
|
|
|
There are two built-in operations that, perhaps surprisingly, act on
|
|
values of any type. It was already mentioned earlier that `log` can
|
|
take any type of value and output it.
|
|
|
|
More interesting is that Rust also defines an ordering for values of
|
|
all datatypes, and allows you to meaningfully apply comparison
|
|
operators (`<`, `>`, `<=`, `>=`, `==`, `!=`) to them. For structural
|
|
types, the comparison happens left to right, so `"abc" < "bac"` (but
|
|
note that `"bac" < "ác"`, because the ordering acts on UTF-8 sequences
|
|
without any sophistication).
|
|
|
|
## Kinds
|
|
|
|
Perhaps surprisingly, the 'copy' (duplicate) operation is not defined
|
|
for all Rust types. Resource types (types with destructors) can not be
|
|
copied, and neither can any type whose copying would require copying a
|
|
resource (such as records or unique boxes containing a resource).
|
|
|
|
This complicates handling of generic functions. If you have a type
|
|
parameter `T`, can you copy values of that type? In Rust, you can't,
|
|
unless you explicitly declare that type parameter to have copyable
|
|
'kind'. A kind is a type of type.
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
// This does not compile
|
|
fn head_bad<T>(v: [T]) -> T { v[0] }
|
|
// This does
|
|
fn head<T: copy>(v: [T]) -> T { v[0] }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
When instantiating a generic function, you can only instantiate it
|
|
with types that fit its kinds. So you could not apply `head` to a
|
|
resource type.
|
|
|
|
Rust has three kinds: 'noncopyable', 'copyable', and 'sendable'. By
|
|
default, type parameters are considered to be noncopyable. You can
|
|
annotate them with the `copy` keyword to declare them copyable, and
|
|
with the `send` keyword to make them sendable.
|
|
|
|
Sendable types are a subset of copyable types. They are types that do
|
|
not contain shared (reference counted) types, which are thus uniquely
|
|
owned by the function that owns them, and can be sent over channels to
|
|
other tasks. Most of the generic functions in the core `comm` module
|
|
take sendable types.
|
|
|
|
## Generic functions and argument-passing
|
|
|
|
The previous section mentioned that arguments are passed by pointer or
|
|
by value based on their type. There is one situation in which this is
|
|
difficult. If you try this program:
|
|
|
|
~~~~{.xfail-test}
|
|
fn plus1(x: int) -> int { x + 1 }
|
|
vec::map([1, 2, 3], plus1);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You will get an error message about argument passing styles
|
|
disagreeing. The reason is that generic types are always passed by
|
|
pointer, so `map` expects a function that takes its argument by
|
|
pointer. The `plus1` you defined, however, uses the default, efficient
|
|
way to pass integers, which is by value. To get around this issue, you
|
|
have to explicitly mark the arguments to a function that you want to
|
|
pass to a generic higher-order function as being passed by pointer,
|
|
using the `&&` sigil:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn plus1(&&x: int) -> int { x + 1 }
|
|
vec::map([1, 2, 3], plus1);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
NOTE: This is inconvenient, and we are hoping to get rid of this
|
|
restriction in the future.
|
|
|
|
# Modules and crates
|
|
|
|
The Rust namespace is divided into modules. Each source file starts
|
|
with its own module.
|
|
|
|
## Local modules
|
|
|
|
The `mod` keyword can be used to open a new, local module. In the
|
|
example below, `chicken` lives in the module `farm`, so, unless you
|
|
explicitly import it, you must refer to it by its long name,
|
|
`farm::chicken`.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
mod farm {
|
|
fn chicken() -> str { "cluck cluck" }
|
|
fn cow() -> str { "mooo" }
|
|
}
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
io::println(farm::chicken());
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Modules can be nested to arbitrary depth.
|
|
|
|
## Crates
|
|
|
|
The unit of independent compilation in Rust is the crate. Libraries
|
|
tend to be packaged as crates, and your own programs may consist of
|
|
one or more crates.
|
|
|
|
When compiling a single `.rs` file, the file acts as the whole crate.
|
|
You can compile it with the `--lib` compiler switch to create a shared
|
|
library, or without, provided that your file contains a `fn main`
|
|
somewhere, to create an executable.
|
|
|
|
It is also possible to include multiple files in a crate. For this
|
|
purpose, you create a `.rc` crate file, which references any number of
|
|
`.rs` code files. A crate file could look like this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
#[link(name = "farm", vers = "2.5", author = "mjh")];
|
|
#[crate_type = "lib"];
|
|
mod cow;
|
|
mod chicken;
|
|
mod horse;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Compiling this file will cause `rustc` to look for files named
|
|
`cow.rs`, `chicken.rs`, `horse.rs` in the same directory as the `.rc`
|
|
file, compile them all together, and, depending on the presence of the
|
|
`crate_type = "lib"` attribute, output a shared library or an executable.
|
|
(If the line `#[crate_type = "lib"];` was omitted, `rustc` would create an
|
|
executable.)
|
|
|
|
The `#[link(...)]` part provides meta information about the module,
|
|
which other crates can use to load the right module. More about that
|
|
later.
|
|
|
|
To have a nested directory structure for your source files, you can
|
|
nest mods in your `.rc` file:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
mod poultry {
|
|
mod chicken;
|
|
mod turkey;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The compiler will now look for `poultry/chicken.rs` and
|
|
`poultry/turkey.rs`, and export their content in `poultry::chicken`
|
|
and `poultry::turkey`. You can also provide a `poultry.rs` to add
|
|
content to the `poultry` module itself.
|
|
|
|
## Using other crates
|
|
|
|
Having compiled a crate that contains the `#[crate_type = "lib"]` attribute,
|
|
you can use it in another crate with a `use` directive. We've already seen
|
|
`use std` in several of the examples, which loads in the [standard library][std].
|
|
|
|
[std]: http://doc.rust-lang.org/doc/std/index/General.html
|
|
|
|
`use` directives can appear in a crate file, or at the top level of a
|
|
single-file `.rs` crate. They will cause the compiler to search its
|
|
library search path (which you can extend with `-L` switch) for a Rust
|
|
crate library with the right name.
|
|
|
|
It is possible to provide more specific information when using an
|
|
external crate.
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
use myfarm (name = "farm", vers = "2.7");
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
When a comma-separated list of name/value pairs is given after `use`,
|
|
these are matched against the attributes provided in the `link`
|
|
attribute of the crate file, and a crate is only used when the two
|
|
match. A `name` value can be given to override the name used to search
|
|
for the crate. So the above would import the `farm` crate under the
|
|
local name `myfarm`.
|
|
|
|
Our example crate declared this set of `link` attributes:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
#[link(name = "farm", vers = "2.5", author = "mjh")];
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The version does not match the one provided in the `use` directive, so
|
|
unless the compiler can find another crate with the right version
|
|
somewhere, it will complain that no matching crate was found.
|
|
|
|
## The core library
|
|
|
|
A set of basic library routines, mostly related to built-in datatypes
|
|
and the task system, are always implicitly linked and included in any
|
|
Rust program, unless the `--no-core` compiler switch is given.
|
|
|
|
This library is documented [here][core].
|
|
|
|
[core]: http://doc.rust-lang.org/doc/core
|
|
|
|
## A minimal example
|
|
|
|
Now for something that you can actually compile yourself. We have
|
|
these two files:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
// mylib.rs
|
|
#[link(name = "mylib", vers = "1.0")];
|
|
fn world() -> str { "world" }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.ignore}
|
|
// main.rs
|
|
use std;
|
|
use mylib;
|
|
fn main() { io::println("hello " + mylib::world()); }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Now compile and run like this (adjust to your platform if necessary):
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
> rustc --lib mylib.rs
|
|
> rustc main.rs -L .
|
|
> ./main
|
|
"hello world"
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Importing
|
|
|
|
When using identifiers from other modules, it can get tiresome to
|
|
qualify them with the full module path every time (especially when
|
|
that path is several modules deep). Rust allows you to import
|
|
identifiers at the top of a file, module, or block.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
use std;
|
|
import io::println;
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
println("that was easy");
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
It is also possible to import just the name of a module (`import
|
|
std::list;`, then use `list::find`), to import all identifiers exported
|
|
by a given module (`import io::*`), or to import a specific set
|
|
of identifiers (`import math::{min, max, pi}`).
|
|
|
|
You can rename an identifier when importing using the `=` operator:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
import prnt = io::println;
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Exporting
|
|
|
|
By default, a module exports everything that it defines. This can be
|
|
restricted with `export` directives at the top of the module or file.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
mod enc {
|
|
export encrypt, decrypt;
|
|
const super_secret_number: int = 10;
|
|
fn encrypt(n: int) -> int { n + super_secret_number }
|
|
fn decrypt(n: int) -> int { n - super_secret_number }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This defines a rock-solid encryption algorithm. Code outside of the
|
|
module can refer to the `enc::encrypt` and `enc::decrypt` identifiers
|
|
just fine, but it does not have access to `enc::super_secret_number`.
|
|
|
|
## Namespaces
|
|
|
|
Rust uses three different namespaces. One for modules, one for types,
|
|
and one for values. This means that this code is valid:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
mod buffalo {
|
|
type buffalo = int;
|
|
fn buffalo(buffalo: buffalo) -> buffalo { buffalo }
|
|
}
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
let buffalo: buffalo::buffalo = 1;
|
|
buffalo::buffalo(buffalo::buffalo(buffalo));
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You don't want to write things like that, but it *is* very practical
|
|
to not have to worry about name clashes between types, values, and
|
|
modules. This allows us to have a module `core::str`, for example, even
|
|
though `str` is a built-in type name.
|
|
|
|
## Resolution
|
|
|
|
The resolution process in Rust simply goes up the chain of contexts,
|
|
looking for the name in each context. Nested functions and modules
|
|
create new contexts inside their parent function or module. A file
|
|
that's part of a bigger crate will have that crate's context as parent
|
|
context.
|
|
|
|
Identifiers can shadow each others. In this program, `x` is of type
|
|
`int`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type t = str;
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
type t = int;
|
|
let x: t;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
An `import` directive will only import into the namespaces for which
|
|
identifiers are actually found. Consider this example:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
type bar = uint;
|
|
mod foo { fn bar() {} }
|
|
mod baz {
|
|
import foo::bar;
|
|
const x: bar = 20u;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
When resolving the type name `bar` in the `const` definition, the
|
|
resolver will first look at the module context for `baz`. This has an
|
|
import named `bar`, but that's a function, not a type, So it continues
|
|
to the top level and finds a type named `bar` defined there.
|
|
|
|
Normally, multiple definitions of the same identifier in a scope are
|
|
disallowed. Local variables defined with `let` are an exception to
|
|
this—multiple `let` directives can redefine the same variable in a
|
|
single scope. When resolving the name of such a variable, the most
|
|
recent definition is used.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
let x = 10;
|
|
let x = x + 10;
|
|
assert x == 20;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This makes it possible to rebind a variable without actually mutating
|
|
it, which is mostly useful for destructuring (which can rebind, but
|
|
not assign).
|
|
|
|
# Interfaces
|
|
|
|
Interfaces are Rust's take on value polymorphism—the thing that
|
|
object-oriented languages tend to solve with methods and inheritance.
|
|
For example, writing a function that can operate on multiple types of
|
|
collections.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: This feature is very new, and will need a few extensions to be
|
|
applicable to more advanced use cases.
|
|
|
|
## Declaration
|
|
|
|
An interface consists of a set of methods. A method is a function that
|
|
can be applied to a `self` value and a number of arguments, using the
|
|
dot notation: `self.foo(arg1, arg2)`.
|
|
|
|
For example, we could declare the interface `to_str` for things that
|
|
can be converted to a string, with a single method of the same name:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
iface to_str {
|
|
fn to_str() -> str;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Implementation
|
|
|
|
To actually implement an interface for a given type, the `impl` form
|
|
is used. This defines implementations of `to_str` for the `int` and
|
|
`str` types.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# iface to_str { fn to_str() -> str; }
|
|
impl of to_str for int {
|
|
fn to_str() -> str { int::to_str(self, 10u) }
|
|
}
|
|
impl of to_str for str {
|
|
fn to_str() -> str { self }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Given these, we may call `1.to_str()` to get `"1"`, or
|
|
`"foo".to_str()` to get `"foo"` again. This is basically a form of
|
|
static overloading—when the Rust compiler sees the `to_str` method
|
|
call, it looks for an implementation that matches the type with a
|
|
method that matches the name, and simply calls that.
|
|
|
|
## Scoping
|
|
|
|
Implementations are not globally visible. Resolving a method to an
|
|
implementation requires that implementation to be in scope. You can
|
|
import and export implementations using the name of the interface they
|
|
implement (multiple implementations with the same name can be in scope
|
|
without problems). Or you can give them an explicit name if you
|
|
prefer, using this syntax:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# iface to_str { fn to_str() -> str; }
|
|
impl nil_to_str of to_str for () {
|
|
fn to_str() -> str { "()" }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Bounded type parameters
|
|
|
|
The useful thing about value polymorphism is that it does not have to
|
|
be static. If object-oriented languages only let you call a method on
|
|
an object when they knew exactly which sub-type it had, that would not
|
|
get you very far. To be able to call methods on types that aren't
|
|
known at compile time, it is possible to specify 'bounds' for type
|
|
parameters.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# iface to_str { fn to_str() -> str; }
|
|
fn comma_sep<T: to_str>(elts: [T]) -> str {
|
|
let mut result = "", first = true;
|
|
for elts.each {|elt|
|
|
if first { first = false; }
|
|
else { result += ", "; }
|
|
result += elt.to_str();
|
|
}
|
|
ret result;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The syntax for this is similar to the syntax for specifying that a
|
|
parameter type has to be copyable (which is, in principle, another
|
|
kind of bound). By declaring `T` as conforming to the `to_str`
|
|
interface, it becomes possible to call methods from that interface on
|
|
values of that type inside the function. It will also cause a
|
|
compile-time error when anyone tries to call `comma_sep` on an array
|
|
whose element type does not have a `to_str` implementation in scope.
|
|
|
|
## Polymorphic interfaces
|
|
|
|
Interfaces may contain type parameters. This defines an interface for
|
|
generalized sequence types:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
iface seq<T> {
|
|
fn len() -> uint;
|
|
fn iter(fn(T));
|
|
}
|
|
impl <T> of seq<T> for [T] {
|
|
fn len() -> uint { vec::len(self) }
|
|
fn iter(b: fn(T)) {
|
|
for self.each {|elt| b(elt); }
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Note that the implementation has to explicitly declare the its
|
|
parameter `T` before using it to specify its interface type. This is
|
|
needed because it could also, for example, specify an implementation
|
|
of `seq<int>`—the `of` clause *refers* to a type, rather than defining
|
|
one.
|
|
|
|
## Casting to an interface type
|
|
|
|
The above allows us to define functions that polymorphically act on
|
|
values of *an* unknown type that conforms to a given interface.
|
|
However, consider this function:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# iface drawable { fn draw(); }
|
|
fn draw_all<T: drawable>(shapes: [T]) {
|
|
for shapes.each {|shape| shape.draw(); }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You can call that on an array of circles, or an array of squares
|
|
(assuming those have suitable `drawable` interfaces defined), but not
|
|
on an array containing both circles and squares.
|
|
|
|
When this is needed, an interface name can be used as a type, causing
|
|
the function to be written simply like this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# iface drawable { fn draw(); }
|
|
fn draw_all(shapes: [drawable]) {
|
|
for shapes.each {|shape| shape.draw(); }
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
There is no type parameter anymore (since there isn't a single type
|
|
that we're calling the function on). Instead, the `drawable` type is
|
|
used to refer to a type that is a reference-counted box containing a
|
|
value for which a `drawable` implementation exists, combined with
|
|
information on where to find the methods for this implementation. This
|
|
is very similar to the 'vtables' used in most object-oriented
|
|
languages.
|
|
|
|
To construct such a value, you use the `as` operator to cast a value
|
|
to an interface type:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# type circle = int; type rectangle = int;
|
|
# iface drawable { fn draw(); }
|
|
# impl of drawable for int { fn draw() {} }
|
|
# fn new_circle() -> int { 1 }
|
|
# fn new_rectangle() -> int { 2 }
|
|
# fn draw_all(shapes: [drawable]) {}
|
|
let c: circle = new_circle();
|
|
let r: rectangle = new_rectangle();
|
|
draw_all([c as drawable, r as drawable]);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This will store the value into a box, along with information about the
|
|
implementation (which is looked up in the scope of the cast). The
|
|
`drawable` type simply refers to such boxes, and calling methods on it
|
|
always works, no matter what implementations are in scope.
|
|
|
|
Note that the allocation of a box is somewhat more expensive than
|
|
simply using a type parameter and passing in the value as-is, and much
|
|
more expensive than statically resolved method calls.
|
|
|
|
## Interface-less implementations
|
|
|
|
If you only intend to use an implementation for static overloading,
|
|
and there is no interface available that it conforms to, you are free
|
|
to leave off the `of` clause.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# type currency = ();
|
|
# fn mk_currency(x: int, s: str) {}
|
|
impl int_util for int {
|
|
fn times(b: fn(int)) {
|
|
let mut i = 0;
|
|
while i < self { b(i); i += 1; }
|
|
}
|
|
fn dollars() -> currency {
|
|
mk_currency(self, "USD")
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This allows cutesy things like `send_payment(10.dollars())`. And the
|
|
nice thing is that it's fully scoped, so the uneasy feeling that
|
|
anybody with experience in object-oriented languages (with the
|
|
possible exception of Rubyists) gets at the sight of such things is
|
|
not justified. It's harmless!
|
|
|
|
# Interacting with foreign code
|
|
|
|
One of Rust's aims, as a system programming language, is to
|
|
interoperate well with C code.
|
|
|
|
We'll start with an example. It's a bit bigger than usual, and
|
|
contains a number of new concepts. We'll go over it one piece at a
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
This is a program that uses OpenSSL's `SHA1` function to compute the
|
|
hash of its first command-line argument, which it then converts to a
|
|
hexadecimal string and prints to standard output. If you have the
|
|
OpenSSL libraries installed, it should 'just work'.
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.xfail-test}
|
|
use std;
|
|
|
|
native mod crypto {
|
|
fn SHA1(src: *u8, sz: uint, out: *u8) -> *u8;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn as_hex(data: [u8]) -> str {
|
|
let mut acc = "";
|
|
for data.each {|byte| acc += #fmt("%02x", byte as uint); }
|
|
ret acc;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn sha1(data: str) -> str unsafe {
|
|
let bytes = str::bytes(data);
|
|
let hash = crypto::SHA1(vec::unsafe::to_ptr(bytes),
|
|
vec::len(bytes), ptr::null());
|
|
ret as_hex(vec::unsafe::from_buf(hash, 20u));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn main(args: [str]) {
|
|
io::println(sha1(args[1]));
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Native modules
|
|
|
|
Before we can call `SHA1`, we have to declare it. That is what this
|
|
part of the program is responsible for:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.xfail-test}
|
|
native mod crypto {
|
|
fn SHA1(src: *u8, sz: uint, out: *u8) -> *u8;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
A `native` module declaration tells the compiler that the program
|
|
should be linked with a library by that name, and that the given list
|
|
of functions are available in that library.
|
|
|
|
In this case, it'll change the name `crypto` to a shared library name
|
|
in a platform-specific way (`libcrypto.so` on Linux, for example), and
|
|
link that in. If you want the module to have a different name from the
|
|
actual library, you can use the `"link_name"` attribute, like:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.xfail-test}
|
|
#[link_name = "crypto"]
|
|
native mod something {
|
|
fn SHA1(src: *u8, sz: uint, out: *u8) -> *u8;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Native calling conventions
|
|
|
|
Most native C code use the cdecl calling convention, so that is what
|
|
Rust uses by default when calling native functions. Some native functions,
|
|
most notably the Windows API, use other calling conventions, so Rust
|
|
provides a way to to hint to the compiler which is expected by using
|
|
the `"abi"` attribute:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
#[cfg(target_os = "win32")]
|
|
#[abi = "stdcall"]
|
|
native mod kernel32 {
|
|
fn SetEnvironmentVariableA(n: *u8, v: *u8) -> int;
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `"abi"` attribute applies to a native mod (it can not be applied
|
|
to a single function within a module), and must be either `"cdecl"`
|
|
or `"stdcall"`. Other conventions may be defined in the future.
|
|
|
|
## Unsafe pointers
|
|
|
|
The native `SHA1` function is declared to take three arguments, and
|
|
return a pointer.
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.xfail-test}
|
|
# native mod crypto {
|
|
fn SHA1(src: *u8, sz: uint, out: *u8) -> *u8;
|
|
# }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
When declaring the argument types to a foreign function, the Rust
|
|
compiler has no way to check whether your declaration is correct, so
|
|
you have to be careful. If you get the number or types of the
|
|
arguments wrong, you're likely to get a segmentation fault. Or,
|
|
probably even worse, your code will work on one platform, but break on
|
|
another.
|
|
|
|
In this case, `SHA1` is defined as taking two `unsigned char*`
|
|
arguments and one `unsigned long`. The rust equivalents are `*u8`
|
|
unsafe pointers and an `uint` (which, like `unsigned long`, is a
|
|
machine-word-sized type).
|
|
|
|
Unsafe pointers can be created through various functions in the
|
|
standard lib, usually with `unsafe` somewhere in their name. You can
|
|
dereference an unsafe pointer with `*` operator, but use
|
|
caution—unlike Rust's other pointer types, unsafe pointers are
|
|
completely unmanaged, so they might point at invalid memory, or be
|
|
null pointers.
|
|
|
|
## Unsafe blocks
|
|
|
|
The `sha1` function is the most obscure part of the program.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# mod crypto { fn SHA1(src: *u8, sz: uint, out: *u8) -> *u8 { out } }
|
|
# fn as_hex(data: [u8]) -> str { "hi" }
|
|
fn sha1(data: str) -> str unsafe {
|
|
let bytes = str::bytes(data);
|
|
let hash = crypto::SHA1(vec::unsafe::to_ptr(bytes),
|
|
vec::len(bytes), ptr::null());
|
|
ret as_hex(vec::unsafe::from_buf(hash, 20u));
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Firstly, what does the `unsafe` keyword at the top of the function
|
|
mean? `unsafe` is a block modifier—it declares the block following it
|
|
to be known to be unsafe.
|
|
|
|
Some operations, like dereferencing unsafe pointers or calling
|
|
functions that have been marked unsafe, are only allowed inside unsafe
|
|
blocks. With the `unsafe` keyword, you're telling the compiler 'I know
|
|
what I'm doing'. The main motivation for such an annotation is that
|
|
when you have a memory error (and you will, if you're using unsafe
|
|
constructs), you have some idea where to look—it will most likely be
|
|
caused by some unsafe code.
|
|
|
|
Unsafe blocks isolate unsafety. Unsafe functions, on the other hand,
|
|
advertise it to the world. An unsafe function is written like this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
unsafe fn kaboom() { "I'm harmless!"; }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This function can only be called from an unsafe block or another
|
|
unsafe function.
|
|
|
|
## Pointer fiddling
|
|
|
|
The standard library defines a number of helper functions for dealing
|
|
with unsafe data, casting between types, and generally subverting
|
|
Rust's safety mechanisms.
|
|
|
|
Let's look at our `sha1` function again.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# mod crypto { fn SHA1(src: *u8, sz: uint, out: *u8) -> *u8 { out } }
|
|
# fn as_hex(data: [u8]) -> str { "hi" }
|
|
# fn x(data: str) -> str unsafe {
|
|
let bytes = str::bytes(data);
|
|
let hash = crypto::SHA1(vec::unsafe::to_ptr(bytes),
|
|
vec::len(bytes), ptr::null());
|
|
ret as_hex(vec::unsafe::from_buf(hash, 20u));
|
|
# }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `str::bytes` function is perfectly safe, it converts a string to
|
|
an `[u8]`. This byte array is then fed to `vec::unsafe::to_ptr`, which
|
|
returns an unsafe pointer to its contents.
|
|
|
|
This pointer will become invalid as soon as the vector it points into
|
|
is cleaned up, so you should be very careful how you use it. In this
|
|
case, the local variable `bytes` outlives the pointer, so we're good.
|
|
|
|
Passing a null pointer as third argument to `SHA1` causes it to use a
|
|
static buffer, and thus save us the effort of allocating memory
|
|
ourselves. `ptr::null` is a generic function that will return an
|
|
unsafe null pointer of the correct type (Rust generics are awesome
|
|
like that—they can take the right form depending on the type that they
|
|
are expected to return).
|
|
|
|
Finally, `vec::unsafe::from_buf` builds up a new `[u8]` from the
|
|
unsafe pointer that was returned by `SHA1`. SHA1 digests are always
|
|
twenty bytes long, so we can pass `20u` for the length of the new
|
|
vector.
|
|
|
|
## Passing structures
|
|
|
|
C functions often take pointers to structs as arguments. Since Rust
|
|
records are binary-compatible with C structs, Rust programs can call
|
|
such functions directly.
|
|
|
|
This program uses the Posix function `gettimeofday` to get a
|
|
microsecond-resolution timer.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
use std;
|
|
type timeval = {mut tv_sec: uint,
|
|
mut tv_usec: uint};
|
|
#[nolink]
|
|
native mod libc {
|
|
fn gettimeofday(tv: *timeval, tz: *()) -> i32;
|
|
}
|
|
fn unix_time_in_microseconds() -> u64 unsafe {
|
|
let x = {mut tv_sec: 0u, mut tv_usec: 0u};
|
|
libc::gettimeofday(ptr::addr_of(x), ptr::null());
|
|
ret (x.tv_sec as u64) * 1000_000_u64 + (x.tv_usec as u64);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
# fn main() { assert #fmt("%?", unix_time_in_microseconds()) != ""; }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The `#[nolink]` attribute indicates that there's no native library to link
|
|
in. The standard C library is already linked with Rust programs.
|
|
|
|
A `timeval`, in C, is a struct with two 32-bit integers. Thus, we
|
|
define a record type with the same contents, and declare
|
|
`gettimeofday` to take a pointer to such a record.
|
|
|
|
The second argument to `gettimeofday` (the time zone) is not used by
|
|
this program, so it simply declares it to be a pointer to the nil
|
|
type. Since null pointer look the same, no matter which type they are
|
|
supposed to point at, this is safe.
|
|
|
|
# Tasks
|
|
|
|
Rust supports a system of lightweight tasks, similar to what is found
|
|
in Erlang or other actor systems. Rust tasks communicate via messages
|
|
and do not share data. However, it is possible to send data without
|
|
copying it by making use of [unique boxes](#unique-boxes), which allow
|
|
the sending task to release ownership of a value, so that the
|
|
receiving task can keep on using it.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: As Rust evolves, we expect the Task API to grow and change
|
|
somewhat. The tutorial documents the API as it exists today.
|
|
|
|
## Spawning a task
|
|
|
|
Spawning a task is done using the various spawn functions in the
|
|
module `task`. Let's begin with the simplest one, `task::spawn()`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let some_value = 22;
|
|
task::spawn {||
|
|
io::println("This executes in the child task.");
|
|
io::println(#fmt("%d", some_value));
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The argument to `task::spawn()` is a [unique
|
|
closure](#unique-closures) of type `fn~()`, meaning that it takes no
|
|
arguments and generates no return value. The effect of `task::spawn()`
|
|
is to fire up a child task that will execute the closure in parallel
|
|
with the creator.
|
|
|
|
## Ports and channels
|
|
|
|
Now that we have spawned a child task, it would be nice if we could
|
|
communicate with it. This is done by creating a *port* with an
|
|
associated *channel*. A port is simply a location to receive messages
|
|
of a particular type. A channel is used to send messages to a port.
|
|
For example, imagine we wish to perform two expensive computations
|
|
in parallel. We might write something like:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn some_expensive_computation() -> int { 42 }
|
|
# fn some_other_expensive_computation() {}
|
|
let port = comm::port::<int>();
|
|
let chan = comm::chan::<int>(port);
|
|
task::spawn {||
|
|
let result = some_expensive_computation();
|
|
comm::send(chan, result);
|
|
}
|
|
some_other_expensive_computation();
|
|
let result = comm::recv(port);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Let's walk through this code line-by-line. The first line creates a
|
|
port for receiving integers:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
let port = comm::port::<int>();
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
This port is where we will receive the message from the child task
|
|
once it is complete. The second line creates a channel for sending
|
|
integers to the port `port`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# let port = comm::port::<int>();
|
|
let chan = comm::chan::<int>(port);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The channel will be used by the child to send a message to the port.
|
|
The next statement actually spawns the child:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn some_expensive_computation() -> int { 42 }
|
|
# let port = comm::port::<int>();
|
|
# let chan = comm::chan::<int>(port);
|
|
task::spawn {||
|
|
let result = some_expensive_computation();
|
|
comm::send(chan, result);
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
This child will perform the expensive computation send the result
|
|
over the channel. Finally, the parent continues by performing
|
|
some other expensive computation and then waiting for the child's result
|
|
to arrive on the port:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn some_other_expensive_computation() {}
|
|
# let port = comm::port::<int>();
|
|
# let chan = comm::chan::<int>(port);
|
|
# comm::send(chan, 0);
|
|
some_other_expensive_computation();
|
|
let result = comm::recv(port);
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
## Creating a task with a bi-directional communication path
|
|
|
|
A very common thing to do is to spawn a child task where the parent
|
|
and child both need to exchange messages with each
|
|
other. The function `task::spawn_listener()` supports this pattern. We'll look
|
|
briefly at how it is used.
|
|
|
|
To see how `spawn_listener()` works, we will create a child task
|
|
which receives `uint` messages, converts them to a string, and sends
|
|
the string in response. The child terminates when `0` is received.
|
|
Here is the function which implements the child task:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
fn stringifier(from_parent: comm::port<uint>,
|
|
to_parent: comm::chan<str>) {
|
|
let mut value: uint;
|
|
do {
|
|
value = comm::recv(from_parent);
|
|
comm::send(to_parent, uint::to_str(value, 10u));
|
|
} while value != 0u;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You can see that the function takes two parameters. The first is a
|
|
port used to receive messages from the parent, and the second is a
|
|
channel used to send messages to the parent. The body itself simply
|
|
loops, reading from the `from_par` port and then sending its response
|
|
to the `to_par` channel. The actual response itself is simply the
|
|
strified version of the received value, `uint::to_str(value)`.
|
|
|
|
Here is the code for the parent task:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# fn stringifier(from_parent: comm::port<uint>,
|
|
# to_parent: comm::chan<str>) {
|
|
# comm::send(to_parent, "22");
|
|
# comm::send(to_parent, "23");
|
|
# comm::send(to_parent, "0");
|
|
# }
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
let from_child = comm::port();
|
|
let to_parent = comm::chan(from_child);
|
|
let to_child = task::spawn_listener {|from_parent|
|
|
stringifier(from_parent, to_parent);
|
|
};
|
|
comm::send(to_child, 22u);
|
|
assert comm::recv(from_child) == "22";
|
|
comm::send(to_child, 23u);
|
|
assert comm::recv(from_child) == "23";
|
|
comm::send(to_child, 0u);
|
|
assert comm::recv(from_child) == "0";
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
The parent first sets up a port to receive data from and a channel
|
|
that the child can use to send data to that port. The call to
|
|
`spawn_listener()` will spawn the child task, providing it with a port
|
|
on which to receive data from its parent, and returning to the parent
|
|
the associated channel. Finally, the closure passed to
|
|
`spawn_listener()` that forms the body of the child task captures the
|
|
`to_parent` channel in its environment, so both parent and child
|
|
can send and receive data to and from the other.
|
|
|
|
## The supervisor relationship
|
|
|
|
By default, failures in Rust propagate upward through the task tree.
|
|
We say that each task is supervised by its parent, meaning that if the
|
|
task fails, that failure is propagated to the parent task, which will
|
|
fail sometime later. This propagation can be disabled by using the
|
|
function `task::unsupervise()`, which disables error propagation from
|
|
the current task to its parent.
|
|
|
|
# Testing
|
|
|
|
The Rust language has a facility for testing built into the language.
|
|
Tests can be interspersed with other code, and annotated with the
|
|
`#[test]` attribute.
|
|
|
|
~~~~{.xfail-test}
|
|
# // FIXME: xfailed because test_twice is a #[test] function it's not
|
|
# // getting compiled
|
|
use std;
|
|
|
|
fn twice(x: int) -> int { x + x }
|
|
|
|
#[test]
|
|
fn test_twice() {
|
|
let mut i = -100;
|
|
while i < 100 {
|
|
assert twice(i) == 2 * i;
|
|
i += 1;
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
When you compile the program normally, the `test_twice` function will
|
|
not be included. To compile and run such tests, compile with the
|
|
`--test` flag, and then run the result:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
> rustc --test twice.rs
|
|
> ./twice
|
|
running 1 tests
|
|
test test_twice ... ok
|
|
result: ok. 1 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Or, if we change the file to fail, for example by replacing `x + x`
|
|
with `x + 1`:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
running 1 tests
|
|
test test_twice ... FAILED
|
|
failures:
|
|
test_twice
|
|
result: FAILED. 0 passed; 1 failed; 0 ignored
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
You can pass a command-line argument to a program compiled with
|
|
`--test` to run only the tests whose name matches the given string. If
|
|
we had, for example, test functions `test_twice`, `test_once_1`, and
|
|
`test_once_2`, running our program with `./twice test_once` would run
|
|
the latter two, and running it with `./twice test_once_2` would run
|
|
only the last.
|
|
|
|
To indicate that a test is supposed to fail instead of pass, you can
|
|
give it a `#[should_fail]` attribute.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
use std;
|
|
|
|
fn divide(a: float, b: float) -> float {
|
|
if b == 0f { fail; }
|
|
a / b
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
#[test]
|
|
#[should_fail]
|
|
fn divide_by_zero() { divide(1f, 0f); }
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
To disable a test completely, add an `#[ignore]` attribute. Running a
|
|
test runner (the program compiled with `--test`) with an `--ignored`
|
|
command-line flag will cause it to also run the tests labelled as
|
|
ignored.
|
|
|
|
A program compiled as a test runner will have the configuration flag
|
|
`test` defined, so that you can add code that won't be included in a
|
|
normal compile with the `#[cfg(test)]` attribute (see [conditional
|
|
compilation](#attributes)).
|