4.6 KiB
% Patterns
Patterns are quite common in Rust. We use them in variable bindings, match statements, and other places, too. Let’s go on a whirlwind tour of all of the things patterns can do!
A quick refresher: you can match against literals directly, and _ acts as an
‘any’ case:
let x = 1;
match x {
1 => println!("one"),
2 => println!("two"),
3 => println!("three"),
_ => println!("anything"),
}
This prints one.
Multiple patterns
You can match multiple patterns with |:
let x = 1;
match x {
1 | 2 => println!("one or two"),
3 => println!("three"),
_ => println!("anything"),
}
This prints one or two.
Ranges
You can match a range of values with ...:
let x = 1;
match x {
1 ... 5 => println!("one through five"),
_ => println!("anything"),
}
This prints one through five.
Ranges are mostly used with integers and chars:
let x = '💅';
match x {
'a' ... 'j' => println!("early letter"),
'k' ... 'z' => println!("late letter"),
_ => println!("something else"),
}
This prints something else
Bindings
You can bind values to names with @:
let x = 1;
match x {
e @ 1 ... 5 => println!("got a range element {}", e),
_ => println!("anything"),
}
This prints got a range element 1. This is useful when you want to
do a complicated match of part of a data structure:
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Person {
name: Option<String>,
}
let name = "Steve".to_string();
let mut x: Option<Person> = Some(Person { name: Some(name) });
match x {
Some(Person { name: ref a @ Some(_), .. }) => println!("{:?}", a),
_ => {}
}
This prints Some("Steve"): We’ve bound the inner name to a.
If you use @ with |, you need to make sure the name is bound in each part
of the pattern:
let x = 5;
match x {
e @ 1 ... 5 | e @ 8 ... 10 => println!("got a range element {}", e),
_ => println!("anything"),
}
Ignoring variants
If you’re matching on an enum which has variants, you can use .. to
ignore the value and type in the variant:
enum OptionalInt {
Value(i32),
Missing,
}
let x = OptionalInt::Value(5);
match x {
OptionalInt::Value(..) => println!("Got an int!"),
OptionalInt::Missing => println!("No such luck."),
}
This prints Got an int!.
Guards
You can introduce ‘match guards’ with if:
enum OptionalInt {
Value(i32),
Missing,
}
let x = OptionalInt::Value(5);
match x {
OptionalInt::Value(i) if i > 5 => println!("Got an int bigger than five!"),
OptionalInt::Value(..) => println!("Got an int!"),
OptionalInt::Missing => println!("No such luck."),
}
This prints Got an int!
ref and ref mut
If you want to get a reference, use the ref keyword:
let x = 5;
match x {
ref r => println!("Got a reference to {}", r),
}
This prints Got a reference to 5.
Here, the r inside the match has the type &i32. In other words, the ref
keyword creates a reference, for use in the pattern. If you need a mutable
reference, ref mut will work in the same way:
let mut x = 5;
match x {
ref mut mr => println!("Got a mutable reference to {}", mr),
}
Destructuring
If you have a compound data type, like a struct, you can destructure it
inside of a pattern:
struct Point {
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
let origin = Point { x: 0, y: 0 };
match origin {
Point { x: x, y: y } => println!("({},{})", x, y),
}
If we only care about some of the values, we don’t have to give them all names:
struct Point {
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
let origin = Point { x: 0, y: 0 };
match origin {
Point { x: x, .. } => println!("x is {}", x),
}
This prints x is 0.
You can do this kind of match on any member, not just the first:
struct Point {
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
let origin = Point { x: 0, y: 0 };
match origin {
Point { y: y, .. } => println!("y is {}", y),
}
This prints y is 0.
This ‘destructuring’ behavior works on any compound data type, like tuples or enums.
Mix and Match
Whew! That’s a lot of different ways to match things, and they can all be mixed and matched, depending on what you’re doing:
match x {
Foo { x: Some(ref name), y: None } => ...
}
Patterns are very powerful. Make good use of them.