Vec
Vec is the standard resizable heap-allocated buffer:
fn main() {
let mut v1 = Vec::new();
v1.push(42);
println!("v1: len = {}, capacity = {}", v1.len(), v1.capacity());
let mut v2 = Vec::with_capacity(v1.len() + 1);
v2.extend(v1.iter());
v2.push(9999);
println!("v2: len = {}, capacity = {}", v2.len(), v2.capacity());
// Canonical macro to initialize a vector with elements.
let mut v3 = vec![0, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4];
// Retain only the even elements.
v3.retain(|x| x % 2 == 0);
println!("{v3:?}");
// Remove consecutive duplicates.
v3.dedup();
println!("{v3:?}");
}
Vec
implements DerefVec
.
Vec
is a type of collection, along withString
andHashMap
. The data it contains is stored on the heap. This means the amount of data doesn’t need to be known at compile time. It can grow or shrink at runtime.- Notice how
Vec<T>
is a generic type too, but you don’t have to specifyT
explicitly. As always with Rust type inference, theT
was established during the firstpush
call. vec![...]
is a canonical macro to use instead ofVec::new()
and it supports adding initial elements to the vector.- To index the vector you use
[
]
, but they will panic if out of bounds. Alternatively, usingget
will return anOption
. Thepop
function will remove the last element. - Show iterating over a vector and mutating the value:
for e in &mut v { *e += 50; }