Literals and operators
Integers 1
, floats 1.2
, characters 'a'
, strings "abc"
, booleans true
and the unit type ()
can be expressed using literals.
Integers can, alternatively, be expressed using hexadecimal, octal or binary
notation using either of these prefixes: 0x
, 0o
or 0b
.
Underscores can be inserted in numeric literals to improve readability, e.g.1_000
is the same as 1000
, and 0.000_001
is the same as 0.000001
.
We need to tell the compiler the type of the literals we use. For now,
we’ll use the u32
suffix to indicate that the literal is an unsigned 32-bit
integer, and the i32
suffix to indicate that it’s a signed 32-bit integer.
The operators available and their precedence in Rust are similar to other
C-like languages.
fn main() {
// Integer addition
println!("1 + 2 = {}", 1u32 + 2);
// Integer subtraction
println!("1 - 2 = {}", 1i32 - 2);
// TODO ^ Try changing `1i32` to `1u32` to see why the type is important
// Short-circuiting boolean logic
println!("true AND false is {}", true && false);
println!("true OR false is {}", true || false);
println!("NOT true is {}", !true);
// Bitwise operations
println!("0011 AND 0101 is {:04b}", 0b0011u32 & 0b0101);
println!("0011 OR 0101 is {:04b}", 0b0011u32 | 0b0101);
println!("0011 XOR 0101 is {:04b}", 0b0011u32 ^ 0b0101);
println!("1 << 5 is {}", 1u32 << 5);
println!("0x80 >> 2 is 0x{:x}", 0x80u32 >> 2);
// Use underscores to improve readability!
println!("One million is written as {}", 1_000_000u32);
}