X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/c25f3400060ea1a02f8fa9de69c39fd7b020e8a5..cc52afa7f2b54d29870ff16f1f11970dd38c1940:/workspace/src/part09.rs?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/workspace/src/part09.rs b/workspace/src/part09.rs index 8e82f03..61cc70b 100644 --- a/workspace/src/part09.rs +++ b/workspace/src/part09.rs @@ -1,3 +1,85 @@ -// Rust-101, Part 09: Iterators (WIP) -// ================================== +// Rust-101, Part 09: Iterators +// ============================ + +use part05::BigInt; + + +pub struct Iter<'a> { + num: &'a BigInt, + idx: usize, // the index of the last number that was returned +} + +// Now we are equipped to implement `Iterator` for `Iter`. +impl<'a> Iterator for Iter<'a> { + // We choose the type of things that we iterate over to be the type of digits, i.e., `u64`. + type Item = u64; + + fn next(&mut self) -> Option { + // First, check whether there's any more digits to return. + if self.idx == 0 { + // We already returned all the digits, nothing to do. + unimplemented!() + } else { + // Otherwise: Decrement, and return next digit. + unimplemented!() + } + } +} + +// All we need now is a function that creates such an iterator for a given `BigInt`. +impl BigInt { + fn iter(&self) -> Iter { + unimplemented!() + } +} + +// We are finally ready to iterate! Remember to edit `main.rs` to run this function. +pub fn main() { + let b = BigInt::new(1 << 63) + BigInt::new(1 << 16) + BigInt::new(1 << 63); + for digit in b.iter() { + println!("{}", digit); + } +} + +// Of course, we don't have to use `for` to apply the iterator. We can also explicitly call `next`. +fn print_digits_v1(b: &BigInt) { + let mut iter = b.iter(); + loop { + // Each time we go through the loop, we analyze the next element presented by the iterator - until it stops. + unimplemented!() + } +} + +fn print_digits_v2(b: &BigInt) { + let mut iter = b.iter(); + while let Some(digit) = iter.next() { + println!("{}", digit) + } +} + +// **Exercise 09.1**: Write a testcase for the iterator, making sure it yields the corrects numbers. +// +// **Exercise 09.2**: Write a function `iter_ldf` that iterators over the digits with the least-significant +// digits coming first. Write a testcase for it. + +// ## Iterator invalidation and lifetimes + +fn iter_invalidation_demo() { + let mut b = BigInt::new(1 << 63) + BigInt::new(1 << 16) + BigInt::new(1 << 63); + for digit in b.iter() { + println!("{}", digit); + /*b = b + BigInt::new(1);*/ /* BAD! */ + } +} + +// ## Iterator conversion trait + +impl<'a> IntoIterator for &'a BigInt { + type Item = u64; + type IntoIter = Iter<'a>; + fn into_iter(self) -> Iter<'a> { + self.iter() + } +} +// With this in place, you can now replace `b.iter()` in `main` by `&b`. Go ahead and try it!