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rust-book
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rust-book
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5. Using Structs to Structure Related Data
Unlike with tuples, in a struct you’ll name each piece of data so it’s clear what the values mean. Adding these names means that structs are more flexible than tuples: you don’t have to rely on
the order of the data to specify or access the values of an instance.
5.1 Defining and Instantiating Structs
fn build_user(email: String, username: String) -> User {
User {
email,
username,
active: true,
sign_in_count: 1,
}
}
let user2 = User {
email: String::from("[email protected]"),
..user1
};
Tuple structs have the added meaning the struct name provides but don’t have names associated with their fields; rather, they just have the types of the fields. Tuple structs are useful when
you want to give the whole tuple a name and make the tuple a different type from other tuples, and when naming each field as in a regular struct would be verbose or redundant.
* struct Color(i32, i32, i32);
struct Point(i32, i32, i32);
Unit-like structs can be useful when you need to implement a trait on some type but don’t have any data that you want to store in the type itself.
5.2 An Example Program Using Structs
-
5.3 Method Syntax
Methods are defined within the context of a struct or an enum or a trait object, and their first parameter is always self, which represents the instance of the struct the method is being
called on.
Associated functions don’t have self as their first parameter (and thus are not methods) because they don’t need an instance of the type to work with (String::from()).
To call this associated function, we use the :: syntax with the struct name;
6. Enums and Pattern Matching
6.1 Defining and Enum
Where structs give you a way of grouping together related fields and data, enums give you a way of saying a value is one of a possible set of values.
6.2 The match Control Flow Construct
match dice_roll {
3 => add_fancy_hat(),
7 => remove_fancy_hat(),
other => move_player(other),
}
match dice_roll {
3 => add_fancy_hat(),
7 => remove_fancy_hat(),
_ => reroll(),
}
6.3 Concise Control Flow with if let
let config_max = Some(3u8);
if let Some(max) = config_max {
println!("The maximum is configured to be {}", max);
}
7. Managing Growing Projects with Packages, Crates, and Modules
* Packages: A Cargo feature that lets you build, test, and share crates
* Crates: A tree of modules that produces a library or executable
* Modules and use: Let you control the organization, scope, and privacy of paths
* Paths: A way of naming an item, such as a struct, function, or module
7.1 Packages and Crates
A crate can come in one of two forms: a binary crate (with a main.rs) or a library crate (lib.rs). A package is a bundle of one or more crates that provides a set of functionality. A package
contains a Cargo.toml file that describes how to build those crates.
7.2 Defining Modules to Control Scope and Privacy
mod <filename> basically means that it implements the code from ./filename.rs. The use key word helps to specify a path to something from a module and makes it easier/cleaner to code.
7.3 Paths for Referring to an Item in the Module Tree
mod front_of_house {
pub mod hosting {
pub fn add_to_waitlist() {}
}
}
pub fn eat_at_restaurant() {
// Absolute path
crate::front_of_house::hosting::add_to_waitlist();
// Relative path
front_of_house::hosting::add_to_waitlist();
}
fn main() {
eat_at_restaurant();
}
* Without pub before mod hosting and fn add_to_waitlist() this program does not compile. So by creating a module, you exclude permission for out-of-scope functions to interact except if it is
made public. The pub keyword on a module only lets code in its ancestor modules refer to it, not access its inner code. Because modules are containers, there’s not much we can do by only
making the module public; we need to go further and choose to make one or more of the items within the module public as well.
7.4 Bringing Paths Into Scope with the use Keyword
- use crate::front_of_house::hosting::add_to_waitlist; Will make it possible to run the function in the main like: add_to_waitlist();
add use crate::front_of_house::hosting::add_to_waitlist as hallo; Now you can call the same function with hallo();
- Filename: Cargo.toml
rand = "0.8.3"
Adding rand as a dependency in Cargo.toml tells Cargo to download the rand package and any dependencies from crates.io and make rand available to our project. Using 'use' to bring items from
their crates into scope.
- use std::io;
use std::io::Write; is the same as -> use std::io::{self, Write};
- use std::collections::*;
7.5 Separating Modules into Different Files
With the example in 7.3, by creating a file front_of_house.rs with in it:
pub mod hosting {
pub fn add_to_waitlist() {}
}
and in the main.rs:
mod front_of_house
use crate::front_of_house::hosting;
pub fn eat_at_restaurant() {
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
}
This would compile.
* Once a file is loaded in your module tree using mod other files only need to specify the path to get to the same.
8. Common collections
- Vector
- String
- Hash map
More to find at: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/collections/index.html
8.1 Storing Lists of Values with Vectors
Reading elements of vectors:
{
let v = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let third: &i32 = &v[2];
println!("The third element is {}", third);
let third: Option<&i32> = v.get(2);
match third {
Some(third) => println!("The third element is {}", third),
None => println!("There is no third element."),
}
}
* Because a vector can only store the same type you could create a vector that holds an enum that contains multiple types!
Vector API's: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/vec/struct.Vec.html
8.2 Storing UTF-8 Encoded Text with Strings
Updating strings by using:
- string1 + &string2
- push_str
- format!("Hello {}!", name)
Indexing into strings:
You can't index a string because it is UTF-8 encoded. In other words, all characters are possible to store in a string and not all characters (e.g. "ß") require 1 byte of memory space,
like the ASCII characters. The way to do it should be:
- index with slices "&s[0..4]", in this way you can take a non-ASCII character by grabbing more than one byte.
- iterate over the string:
per character ".chars()"
per byte ".bytes()"
8.3 Storing Keys with Associated Values in Hash Maps
* use std::collections::HashMap;
The type HashMap<K, V> stores a mapping of keys of type K to values of type V using a hashing function, which determines how it places these keys and values into memory.
Accessing values in a hash map:
- get()
- for loop (in an arbitrary order)
* If we insert a key and a value into a hash map and then insert that same key with a different value, the value associated with that key will be replaced.
Updating a value based on the old value:
use std::collections::HashMap;
let text = "hello world wonderful world";
let mut map = HashMap::new();
for word in text.split_whitespace() {
let count = map.entry(word).or_insert(0);
*count += 1;
}
println!("{:?}", map);
=> {"world": 2, "hello": 1, "wonderful": 1}
10. Generic types, traits and lifetimes
10.1 Generic data types
11. Writing Automated Tests
11.1 How to Write Tests
11.2 Controlling How Tests Are Run
11.3 Test Organization
13. Functional language features: iterators and closures
13.1 Closures: Anonynous functions that capture their environment
Closures can be saved in a variable or passed as arguments to other functions. Unlike functions, closures can capture values from the scope in which they're defined.
- Closure without a parameters: (|| ...)
- Closure with parameters: (|x| ...)
Closures don't require you to annotate the types of the parameters or the return value like fn functions do. It is possible though to specify parameters/output:
fn add_one_v1 (x: u32) -> u32 { x + 1 }
let add_one_v2 = |x: u32| -> u32 { x + 1 };
let add_one_v3 = |x| { x + 1 };
let add_one_v4 = |x| x + 1 ;
If you want to force the closure to take ownership of the values it uses in the environment even though the body of the closure doesn’t strictly need ownership, you can
use the 'move' keyword before the parameter list.
The way a closure captures and handles values from the environment affects which traits the closure implements, and traits are how functions and structs can specify what
kinds of closures they can use. Closures will automatically implement one, two, or all three of these Fn traits, in an additive fashion, depending on how the closure’s
body handles the values:
- FnOnce applies to closures that can be called once. All closures implement at least this trait, because all closures can be called. A closure that moves captured
values out of its body will only implement FnOnce and none of the other Fn traits, because it can only be called once.
- FnMut applies to closures that don’t move captured values out of their body, but that might mutate the captured values. These closures can be called more than once.
- Fn applies to closures that don’t move captured values out of their body and that don’t mutate captured values, as well as closures that capture nothing from their
environment. These closures can be called more than once without mutating their environment, which is important in cases such as calling a closure multiple times
concurrently.
13.2 Processing a series of items with iterators
You don't have to make a variable 'mut' when you want to iterate over it using a for loop. The for loop takes ownership and does this himself.
'map' and 'filter' create a new iterator on top of 'iter'. 'filter' creates a new iterator with all the elements that returned true for example.
13.3 Improving Our I/O Project
-
13.4 Comparing Performance: Loops vs. Iterators
-
14. More about Cargo and Crates.io
14.1 Customizing Builds with Release Profiles
[profile.*] sections in the project’s Cargo.toml file. By adding [profile.*] sections for any profile you want to customize, you override any subset of the default settings.
[profile.dev]
opt-level = 0 (less optimizations)
[profile.release]
opt-level = 3 (many optimizations) *ranges from 0 - 3 for both, but 1 for dev mode is less optimnized than 1 for release
14.2 Publishing a Crate to Crates.io
Read docs
14.3 Cargo Workspaces
- add to Cargo.toml file:
[workspace]
members = [
"adder",
"add_one",
]
- now:
├── Cargo.lock
├── Cargo.toml
├── add_one
│ ├── Cargo.toml
│ └── src
│ └── lib.rs
├── adder
│ ├── Cargo.toml
│ └── src
│ └── main.rs
└── target
- only with same target and Cargo.lock file. Now add to adder/Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
add_one = { path = "../add_one" }
- and to adder/src/main.rs
use add_one;
add_one::add_one();
- if wanting to use external packages, add the crate in all Cargo.toml as a dependency where you want to use it and bring it in scope as usual.
- cargo test -p add_one, only do tests in that workspace.
14.4 Installing Binaries from Crates.io with cargo install
The cargo install command allows you to install and use binary crates locally. So programs, crates with a main.rs.
ripgrep is a rust tool that works the same as grep, finding files. Installing it by cargo install ripgrep.
14.5 Extending Cargo with Custom Commands
Tools located in .cargo/bin
16. Fearless Concurrency
Concurrent programming, where different parts of a program execute independently.
Parallel programming, where different parts of a program execute at the same time.
16.1 Using Threads to Run Code Simultaneously
By adding the 'move' keyword before the closure, we force the closure to take ownership of the values it’s using rather than allowing Rust to infer that it
should borrow the values.
16.2 Using Message Passing to Transfer Data Between Threads
To accomplish message-sending concurrency, Rust's standard library provides an implementation of channels. A channel is a general programming concept by
which data is sent from one thread to another.
use std::sync::mpsc;
use std::thread;
fn main() {
let (tx, rx) = mpsc::channel();
thread::spawn(move || {
let val = String::from("hi");
tx.send(val).unwrap();
});
let received = rx.recv().unwrap();
println!("Got: {}", received);
}
16.3 Shared-State Concurrency
Mutex is an abbreviation for mutual exclusion, as in, a mutex allows only one thread to access some data at any given time. To access the data in a mutex, a
thread must first signal that it wants access by asking to acquire the mutex’s lock. The lock is a data structure that is part of the mutex that keeps track of
who currently has exclusive access to the data. Therefore, the mutex is described as guarding the data it holds via the locking system.
use std::sync::{Arc, Mutex};
use std::thread;
fn main() {
let counter = Arc::new(Mutex::new(0));
let mut handles = vec![];
for _ in 0..10 {
let counter = Arc::clone(&counter);
let handle = thread::spawn(move || {
let mut num = counter.lock().unwrap();
*num += 1;
});
handles.push(handle);
}
for handle in handles {
handle.join().unwrap();
}
println!("Result: {}", *counter.lock().unwrap());
}
16.4 Extensible Concurrency with the Sync and Send Traits
19. Advanced features
19.1 Unsafe Rust
19.2 Advanced Traits
19.3 Advanced Types
19.4 Advanced Funtions and Closures
fn add_one(x: i32) -> i32 {
x + 1
}
fn do_twice(f: fn(i32) -> i32, arg: i32) -> i32 {
f(arg) + f(arg)
}
fn main() {
let answer = do_twice(add_one, 5);
println!("The answer is: {}", answer);
}
19.5 Macros
- 'derive' attribute, which generates an implementation of various traits
# The declarative macro , Macros by example:
- vec![1, 2, 3] turns into:
#[macro_export] -> macro available whenever the crate where macro is defined is brought into scope
macro_rules! vec {
( $( $x:expr ),* ) => { -> $ to declare a variable, $x:expr matches a rust expression and gives name $x,
{ the comma indicates a literal comma could appear, the * means zero or more of
let mut temp_vec = Vec::new(); whatever precedes.
$(
temp_vec.push($x);
)*
temp_vec
}
};
}
turns into:
{
let mut temp_vec = Vec::new();
temp_vec.push(1);
temp_vec.push(2);
temp_vec.push(3);
temp_vec
}
# The procedural macro:
- custom derive, attritbute-like and function-like
* Custom derive example: the HelloMacro trait:
use hello_macro::HelloMacro;
use hello_macro_derive::HelloMacro;
#[derive(HelloMacro)]
struct Pancakes;
fn main() {
Pancakes::hello_macro();
}
- To have this working we need:
cargo new hello_macro --lib
src/lib.rs:
pub trait HelloMacro {
fn hello_macro();
}
- Within this we need:
cargo new hello_macro_derive --lib
Cargo.toml:
[lib]
proc-macro = true
[dependencies]
syn = "1.0"
quote = "1.0"
hello_macro_derives/srs/lib.rs:
use proc_macro::TokenStream; -> compiler's API that allows us to read and manipulate Rust code from our code
use syn; -> parses rust code from a string into data structure that we can perform operations on, returns
DeriveInput struct
use quote::quote; -> turns syn data structures back into Rust code
#[proc_macro_derive(HelloMacro)]
pub fn hello_macro_derive(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
// Construct a representation of Rust code as a syntax tree
// that we can manipulate
let ast = syn::parse(input).unwrap();
// Build the trait implementation
impl_hello_macro(&ast)
}
fn impl_hello_macro(ast: &syn::DeriveInput) -> TokenStream {
let name = &ast.ident;
let gen = quote! {
impl HelloMacro for #name {
fn hello_macro() {
println!("Hello, Macro! My name is {}!", stringify!(#name));
}
}
};
gen.into()
}
- last thing to do:
add to Cargo.toml file:
hello_macro = { path = "../hello_macro" }
hello_macro_derive = { path = "../hello_macro/hello_macro_derive" }
* Attribute-like macros:
#[route(GET, "/")]
fn index() {
#[proc_macro_attribute]
pub fn route(attr: TokenStream, item: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {
* Function-like macros
let sql = sql!(SELECT * FROM posts WHERE id=1);
#[proc_macro]
pub fn sql(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream {