X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/375923e203d323dadc639434ebc1f29530f4ac2a..bc8b6a556edacde1fcdb3bc9c1568373bc31d2d8:/src/part03.rs diff --git a/src/part03.rs b/src/part03.rs index 2a5eb16..b81bbc3 100644 --- a/src/part03.rs +++ b/src/part03.rs @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ fn read_vec() -> Vec { //@ concurrently, that also reads from standard input? The result would be a mess. Hence //@ Rust requires us to `lock` standard input if we want to perform large operations on //@ it. (See [the documentation](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/io/struct.Stdin.html) for - //@ more details.) + //@ more details.) for line in stdin.lock().lines() { // Rust's type for (dynamic, growable) strings is `String`. However, our variable `line` // here is not yet of that type: It has type `io::Result`. @@ -99,9 +99,10 @@ pub fn main() { min.print(); /*@*/ } -// **Exercise 03.1**: Define a trait `Print` to write a generic version of -// `SomethingOrNothing::print`. -// Implement that trait for `i32`, and change the code above to use it. +// **Exercise 03.1**: The goal is to write a generic version of `SomethingOrNothing::print`. +// To this end, define a trait `Print` that provides (simple) generic printing, and implement +// that trait for `i32`. Then define `SomethingOrNothing::print2` to use that trait, and change +// `main` above to use the new generic `print2` function. // I will again provide a skeleton for this solution. It also shows how to attach bounds to generic // implementations (just compare it to the `impl` block from the previous exercise). // You can read this as "For all types `T` satisfying the `Print` trait, I provide an implementation @@ -114,6 +115,9 @@ pub fn main() { pub trait Print { /* Add things here */ } +impl Print for i32 { + /* Add things here */ +} impl SomethingOrNothing { fn print2(self) { unimplemented!()