Compound Types
Types | Literals | |
---|---|---|
Arrays | [T; N] | [20, 30, 40] , [0; 3] |
Tuples | () , (T,) , (T1, T2) , … | () , (‘x’,) , (‘x’, 1.2) , … |
Array assignment and access:
fn main() {
let mut a: [i8; 10] = [42; 10];
a[5] = 0;
println!("a: {:?}", a);
}
Tuple assignment and access:
fn main() {
let t: (i8, bool) = (7, true);
println!("1st index: {}", t.0);
println!("2nd index: {}", t.1);
}
Key points:
Arrays:
Arrays have elements of the same type,
T
, and length,N
, which is a compile-time constant. Note that the length of the array is part of its type, which means that[u8; 3]
and[u8; 4]
are considered two different types.We can use literals to assign values to arrays.
In the main function, the print statement asks for the debug implementation with the
?
format parameter:{}
gives the default output,{:?}
gives the debug output. We could also have used{a}
and{a:?}
without specifying the value after the format string.Adding
#
, eg{a:#?}
, invokes a “pretty printing” format, which can be easier to read.
Tuples:
Like arrays, tuples have a fixed length.
Tuples group together values of different types into a compound type.
Fields of a tuple can be accessed by the period and the index of the value, e.g.
t.0
,t.1
.The empty tuple
()
is also known as the “unit type”. It is both a type, and the only valid value of that type - that is to say both the type and its value are expressed as()
. It is used to indicate, for example, that a function or expression has no return value, as we’ll see in a future slide.- You can think of it as
void
that can be familiar to you from other programming languages.
- You can think of it as