Processing a Series of Items with Iterators
The iterator pattern allows you to perform some task on a sequence of items in turn. An iterator is responsible for the logic of iterating over each item and determining when the sequence has finished. When you use iterators, you don’t have to reimplement that logic yourself.
In Rust, iterators are lazy, meaning they have no effect until you call methods that consume the iterator to use it up. For example, the code in Listing 13-10 creates an iterator over the items in the vector v1
by calling the iter
method defined on Vec<T>
. This code by itself doesn’t do anything useful.
The iterator is stored in the v1_iter
variable. Once we’ve created an iterator, we can use it in a variety of ways. In Listing 3-5 in Chapter 3, we iterated over an array using a for
loop to execute some code on each of its items. Under the hood this implicitly created and then consumed an iterator, but we glossed over how exactly that works until now.
In the example in Listing 13-11, we separate the creation of the iterator from the use of the iterator in the for
loop. When the for
loop is called using the iterator in v1_iter
, each element in the iterator is used in one iteration of the loop, which prints out each value.
In languages that don’t have iterators provided by their standard libraries, you would likely write this same functionality by starting a variable at index 0, using that variable to index into the vector to get a value, and incrementing the variable value in a loop until it reached the total number of items in the vector.
Iterators handle all that logic for you, cutting down on repetitive code you could potentially mess up. Iterators give you more flexibility to use the same logic with many different kinds of sequences, not just data structures you can index into, like vectors. Let’s examine how iterators do that.
The Iterator Trait and the next Method
All iterators implement a trait named Iterator
that is defined in the standard library. The definition of the trait looks like this:
#![allow(unused)]
fn main() {
pub trait Iterator {
type Item;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item>;
// methods with default implementations elided
}
}
Notice this definition uses some new syntax: type Item
and Self::Item
, which are defining an associated type with this trait. We’ll talk about associated types in depth in Chapter 19. For now, all you need to know is that this code says implementing the Iterator
trait requires that you also define an Item
type, and this Item
type is used in the return type of the next
method. In other words, the Item
type will be the type returned from the iterator.
The Iterator
trait only requires implementors to define one method: the next
method, which returns one item of the iterator at a time wrapped in Some
and, when iteration is over, returns None
.
We can call the next
method on iterators directly; Listing 13-12 demonstrates what values are returned from repeated calls to next
on the iterator created from the vector.
Note that we needed to make v1_iter
mutable: calling the next
method on an iterator changes internal state that the iterator uses to keep track of where it is in the sequence. In other words, this code consumes, or uses up, the iterator. Each call to next
eats up an item from the iterator. We didn’t need to make v1_iter
mutable when we used a for
loop because the loop took ownership of v1_iter
and made it mutable behind the scenes.
Also note that the values we get from the calls to next
are immutable references to the values in the vector. The iter
method produces an iterator over immutable references. If we want to create an iterator that takes ownership of v1
and returns owned values, we can call into_iter
instead of iter
. Similarly, if we want to iterate over mutable references, we can call iter_mut
instead of iter
.
Methods that Consume the Iterator
The Iterator
trait has a number of different methods with default implementations provided by the standard library; you can find out about these methods by looking in the standard library API documentation for the Iterator
trait. Some of these methods call the next
method in their definition, which is why you’re required to implement the next
method when implementing the Iterator
trait.
Methods that call next
are called consuming adapters, because calling them uses up the iterator. One example is the sum
method, which takes ownership of the iterator and iterates through the items by repeatedly calling next
, thus consuming the iterator. As it iterates through, it adds each item to a running total and returns the total when iteration is complete. Listing 13-13 has a test illustrating a use of the sum
method:
We aren’t allowed to use v1_iter
after the call to sum
because sum
takes ownership of the iterator we call it on.
Methods that Produce Other Iterators
Iterator adapters are methods defined on the Iterator
trait that don’t consume the iterator. Instead, they produce different iterators by changing some aspect of the original iterator.
Listing 13-14 shows an example of calling the iterator adapter method map
, which takes a closure to call on each item as the items are iterated through. The map
method returns a new iterator that produces the modified items. The closure here creates a new iterator in which each item from the vector will be incremented by 1:
However, this code produces a warning:
$ cargo run
Compiling iterators v0.1.0 (file:///projects/iterators)
warning: unused `Map` that must be used
--> src/main.rs:4:5
|
4 | v1.iter().map(|x| x + 1);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: iterators are lazy and do nothing unless consumed
= note: `#[warn(unused_must_use)]` on by default
help: use `let _ = ...` to ignore the resulting value
|
4 | let _ = v1.iter().map(|x| x + 1);
| +++++++
warning: `iterators` (bin "iterators") generated 1 warning
Finished `dev` profile [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.47s
Running `target/debug/iterators`
The code in Listing 13-14 doesn’t do anything; the closure we’ve specified never gets called. The warning reminds us why: iterator adapters are lazy, and we need to consume the iterator here.
To fix this warning and consume the iterator, we’ll use the collect
method, which we used in Chapter 12 with env::args
in Listing 12-1. This method consumes the iterator and collects the resulting values into a collection data type.
In Listing 13-15, we collect the results of iterating over the iterator that’s returned from the call to map
into a vector. This vector will end up containing each item from the original vector incremented by 1.
Because map
takes a closure, we can specify any operation we want to perform on each item. This is a great example of how closures let you customize some behavior while reusing the iteration behavior that the Iterator
trait provides.
You can chain multiple calls to iterator adapters to perform complex actions in a readable way. But because all iterators are lazy, you have to call one of the consuming adapter methods to get results from calls to iterator adapters.
Using Closures that Capture Their Environment
Many iterator adapters take closures as arguments, and commonly the closures we’ll specify as arguments to iterator adapters will be closures that capture their environment.
For this example, we’ll use the filter
method that takes a closure. The closure gets an item from the iterator and returns a bool
. If the closure returns true
, the value will be included in the iteration produced by filter
. If the closure returns false
, the value won’t be included.
In Listing 13-16, we use filter
with a closure that captures the shoe_size
variable from its environment to iterate over a collection of Shoe
struct instances. It will return only shoes that are the specified size.
The shoes_in_size
function takes ownership of a vector of shoes and a shoe size as parameters. It returns a vector containing only shoes of the specified size.
In the body of shoes_in_size
, we call into_iter
to create an iterator that takes ownership of the vector. Then we call filter
to adapt that iterator into a new iterator that only contains elements for which the closure returns true
.
The closure captures the shoe_size
parameter from the environment and compares the value with each shoe’s size, keeping only shoes of the size specified. Finally, calling collect
gathers the values returned by the adapted iterator into a vector that’s returned by the function.
The test shows that when we call shoes_in_size
, we get back only shoes that have the same size as the value we specified.