X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/9f6c55ebcab2e1d3073e8bb6c8c910d0116efee4..9f9b301fd5e86ae4b8cf743f80a129e4addb3635:/src/part10.rs?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/src/part10.rs b/src/part10.rs index 53fb0b3..0c90369 100644 --- a/src/part10.rs +++ b/src/part10.rs @@ -1,53 +1,144 @@ -// Rust-101, Part 09: Closures (WIP) -// ================================= - -use std::io::prelude::*; -use std::io; +// Rust-101, Part 10: Closures +// =========================== +use std::fmt; use part05::BigInt; +//@ Assume we want to write a function that does *something* on, say, every digit of a `BigInt`. +//@ We will then need a way to express the action that we want to be taken, and to pass this to +//@ our function. In Rust, a natural first attempt to express this is to have a trait for it. + +// So, let us define a trait that demands that the type provides some method `do_action` on digits. +//@ This immediately raises the question: How do we pass `self` to that function? Owned, shared reference, +//@ or mutable reference? The typical strategy to answer this question is to use the strongest +//@ type that still works. Certainly, passing `self` in owned form does not work: Then the function +//@ would consume `self`, and we could not call it again, on the second digit. So let's go with a mutable reference. trait Action { fn do_action(&mut self, digit: u64); } +// Now we can write a function that takes some `a` of a type `A` such that we can call `do_action` on `a`, passing it every digit. impl BigInt { fn act_v1(&self, mut a: A) { + //@ Remember that the `mut` above is just an annotation to Rust, telling it that we're okay with `a` being mutated. + //@ Calling `do_action` on `a` takes a mutable reference, so mutation could indeed happen. for digit in self { - a.do_action(digit); + a.do_action(digit); /*@*/ } } } +//@ As the next step, we need to come up with some action, and write an appropriate implementation of `Action` for it. +//@ So, let's say we want to print every digit, and to make this less boring, we want the digits to be prefixed by some +//@ arbitrary string. `do_action` has to know this string, so we store it in `self`. struct PrintWithString { prefix: String, } impl Action for PrintWithString { + // Here we perform the actual printing of the prefix and the digit. We're not making use of our ability to + // change `self` here, but we could replace the prefix if we wanted. fn do_action(&mut self, digit: u64) { - println!("{}{}", self.prefix, digit); + println!("{}{}", self.prefix, digit); /*@*/ } } +// Finally, this function takes a `BigInt` and a prefix, and prints the digits with the given prefix. +//@ It does so by creating an instance of `PrintWithString`, giving it the prefix, and then passing that to `act_v1`. +//@ Since `PrintWithString` implements `Action`, Rust now knows what to do. fn print_with_prefix_v1(b: &BigInt, prefix: String) { let my_action = PrintWithString { prefix: prefix }; b.act_v1(my_action); } +// Here's a small main function, demonstrating the code above in action. Remember to edit `main.rs` to run it. pub fn main() { let bignum = BigInt::new(1 << 63) + BigInt::new(1 << 16) + BigInt::new(1 << 63); print_with_prefix_v1(&bignum, "Digit: ".to_string()); } +// ## Closures +//@ Now, as it turns out, this pattern of describing some form of an action, that can carry in additional data, is very common. +//@ In general, this is called a *closure*. Closures take some arguments and produce a result, and they have an *environment* +//@ they can use, which corresponds to the type `PrintWithString` (or any other type implementing `Action`). Again we have the +//@ choice of passing this environment in owned or borrowed form, so there are three traits for closures in Rust: `Fn`-closures +//@ get a shared reference, `FnMut`-closures get a mutable reference, and `FnOnce`-closures consume their environment (and can hence +//@ be called only once). The syntax for a closure trait which takes arguments of type `T1`, `T2`, ... and returns something +//@ of type `U` is `Fn(T1, T2, ...) -> U`. + +// This defines `act` very similar to above, but now we demand `A` to be the type of a closure that mutates its borrowed environment, +// takes a digit, and returns nothing. impl BigInt { fn act(&self, mut a: A) { for digit in self { - a(digit); + // We can call closures as if they were functions - but really, what's happening here is translated to essentially what we wrote above, in `act_v1`. + a(digit); /*@*/ } } } +// Now that we saw how to write a function that operates on closures, let's see how to write a closure. pub fn print_with_prefix(b: &BigInt, prefix: String) { + //@ The syntax for closures is `|arg1, arg2, ...| code`. Notice that the closure can reference variables like `prefix` that it did not + //@ take as argument - variables that happen to be present *outside* of the closure. We say that the closure *captures* + //@ variables. Rust will now automatically create a type (like `PrintWithString`) for the environment of the closure + //@ with fields for every captured variable, implement the closure trait for this type such that the action performed + //@ is given by the code of the closure, and finally it will instantiate the environment type here at the definition site + //@ of the closure and fill it appropriately. b.act(|digit| println!("{}{}", prefix, digit) ); } +// You can change `main` to call this function, and you should notice - nothing, no difference in behavior. +// But we wrote much less boilerplate code! + +// Remember that we decided to use the `FnMut` trait above? This means our closure could actually mutate its environment. +// For example, we can use that to count the digits as they are printed. +pub fn print_and_count(b: &BigInt) { + let mut count: usize = 0; + //@ This time, the environment will contain a field of type `&mut usize`, that will be initialized with a mutable reference of + //@ `count`. The closure, since it mutably borrows its environment, is able to access this field and mutate `count` + //@ through it. Once `act` returns, the closure is destroyed and `count` is no longer borrowed. Because closures compile down + //@ to normal types, all the borrow checking continues to work as usually, and we cannot accidentally leak a closure somewhere + //@ that still contains, in its environment, a dead reference. + b.act(|digit| { println!("{}: {}", count, digit); count = count +1; } ); + println!("There are {} digits", count); +} + +// ## Fun with iterators and closures +//@ If you are familiar with functional languages, you are probably aware that one can have lots of fun with iterators and closures. +//@ Rust provides a whole lot of methods on iterators that allow us to write pretty functional-style list manipulation. + +// Let's say we want to write a function that increments every entry of a `Vec` by some number, then looks for numbers larger than some threshold, and prints them. +fn inc_print_threshold(v: &Vec, offset: i32, threshold: i32) { + //@ `map` takes a closure that is applied to every element of the iterator. `filter` removes elements + //@ from the iterator that do not pass the test given by the closure. + //@ + //@ Since all these closures compile down to the pattern described above, there is actually no heap allocation going on here. This makes + //@ closures very efficient, and it makes optimization fairly trivial: The resulting code will look like you hand-rolled the loop in C. + for i in v.iter().map(|n| *n + offset).filter(|n| *n > threshold) { + println!("{}", i); + } +} + +// Sometimes it is useful to know both the position of some element in a list, and its value. That's where the `enumerate` function helps. +fn print_enumerated(v: &Vec) { + //@ `enumerate` turns an iterator over `T` into an iterator over `(usize, T)`, where the first element just counts the position in the iterator. + //@ We can do pattern matching right in the loop header to obtain names for both the position, and the value. + for (i, t) in v.iter().enumerate() { + println!("Position {}: {}", i, t); + } +} + +// And as a final example, one can also collect all elements of an iterator, and put them, e.g., in a vector. +fn filter_vec_by_divisor(v: &Vec, divisor: i32) -> Vec { + //@ Here, the return type of `collect` is inferred based on the return type of our function. In general, it can return anything implementing + //@ [`FromIterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.FromIterator.html). Notice that `iter` gives us an iterator over + //@ borrowed `i32`, but we want to own them for the result, so we insert a `map` to dereference. + v.iter().map(|n| *n).filter(|n| *n % divisor == 0).collect() /*@*/ +} + +// **Exercise 10.1**: Look up the [documentation of `Iterator`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/iter/trait.Iterator.html) to learn about more functions +// that can act on iterators. Try using some of them. What about a function that sums the even numbers of an iterator? Or a function that computes the +// product of those numbers that sit at odd positions? A function that checks whether a vector contains a certain number? Whether all numbers are +// smaller than some threshold? Be creative! -//@ [index](main.html) | [previous](part08.html) | [next](main.html) +//@ [index](main.html) | [previous](part09.html) | [raw source](workspace/src/part10.rs) | [next](part11.html)