<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0"> <meta name="generator" content="rustdoc"> <meta name="description" content="Source to the Rust file `libstd/primitive_docs.rs`."> <meta name="keywords" content="rust, rustlang, rust-lang"> <title>primitive_docs.rs.html -- source</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../normalize.css"> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../rustdoc.css" id="mainThemeStyle"> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../dark.css"> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../../main.css" id="themeStyle"> <script src="../../storage.js"></script> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="https://doc.rust-lang.org/favicon.ico"> </head> <body class="rustdoc source"> <!--[if lte IE 8]> <div class="warning"> This old browser is unsupported and will most likely display funky things. </div> <![endif]--> <nav class="sidebar"> <div class="sidebar-menu">☰</div> <a href='../../std/index.html'><img src='https://www.rust-lang.org/logos/rust-logo-128x128-blk-v2.png' alt='logo' width='100'></a> </nav> <div class="theme-picker"> <button id="theme-picker" aria-label="Pick another theme!"> <img src="../../brush.svg" width="18" alt="Pick another theme!"> </button> <div id="theme-choices"></div> </div> <script src="../../theme.js"></script> <nav class="sub"> <form class="search-form js-only"> <div class="search-container"> <input class="search-input" name="search" autocomplete="off" placeholder="Click or press ‘S’ to search, ‘?’ for more options…" type="search"> </div> </form> </nav> <section id='main' class="content"><pre class="line-numbers"><span id="1"> 1</span> <span id="2"> 2</span> <span id="3"> 3</span> <span id="4"> 4</span> <span id="5"> 5</span> <span id="6"> 6</span> <span id="7"> 7</span> <span id="8"> 8</span> <span id="9"> 9</span> <span id="10"> 10</span> <span id="11"> 11</span> <span id="12"> 12</span> <span id="13"> 13</span> <span id="14"> 14</span> <span id="15"> 15</span> <span id="16"> 16</span> <span id="17"> 17</span> <span id="18"> 18</span> <span id="19"> 19</span> <span id="20"> 20</span> <span id="21"> 21</span> <span id="22"> 22</span> <span id="23"> 23</span> <span id="24"> 24</span> <span id="25"> 25</span> <span id="26"> 26</span> <span id="27"> 27</span> <span id="28"> 28</span> <span id="29"> 29</span> <span id="30"> 30</span> <span id="31"> 31</span> <span id="32"> 32</span> <span id="33"> 33</span> <span id="34"> 34</span> <span id="35"> 35</span> <span id="36"> 36</span> <span id="37"> 37</span> <span id="38"> 38</span> <span id="39"> 39</span> <span id="40"> 40</span> <span id="41"> 41</span> <span id="42"> 42</span> <span id="43"> 43</span> <span id="44"> 44</span> <span id="45"> 45</span> <span id="46"> 46</span> <span id="47"> 47</span> <span id="48"> 48</span> <span id="49"> 49</span> <span id="50"> 50</span> <span id="51"> 51</span> <span id="52"> 52</span> <span id="53"> 53</span> <span id="54"> 54</span> <span id="55"> 55</span> <span id="56"> 56</span> <span id="57"> 57</span> <span id="58"> 58</span> <span id="59"> 59</span> <span id="60"> 60</span> <span id="61"> 61</span> <span id="62"> 62</span> <span id="63"> 63</span> <span id="64"> 64</span> <span id="65"> 65</span> <span id="66"> 66</span> <span id="67"> 67</span> <span id="68"> 68</span> <span id="69"> 69</span> <span id="70"> 70</span> <span id="71"> 71</span> <span id="72"> 72</span> <span id="73"> 73</span> <span id="74"> 74</span> <span id="75"> 75</span> <span id="76"> 76</span> <span id="77"> 77</span> <span id="78"> 78</span> <span id="79"> 79</span> <span id="80"> 80</span> <span id="81"> 81</span> <span id="82"> 82</span> <span id="83"> 83</span> <span id="84"> 84</span> <span id="85"> 85</span> <span id="86"> 86</span> <span id="87"> 87</span> <span id="88"> 88</span> <span id="89"> 89</span> <span id="90"> 90</span> <span id="91"> 91</span> <span id="92"> 92</span> <span id="93"> 93</span> <span id="94"> 94</span> <span id="95"> 95</span> <span id="96"> 96</span> <span id="97"> 97</span> <span id="98"> 98</span> <span id="99"> 99</span> <span id="100"> 100</span> <span id="101"> 101</span> <span id="102"> 102</span> <span id="103"> 103</span> <span id="104"> 104</span> <span id="105"> 105</span> <span id="106"> 106</span> <span id="107"> 107</span> <span id="108"> 108</span> <span id="109"> 109</span> <span id="110"> 110</span> <span id="111"> 111</span> <span id="112"> 112</span> <span id="113"> 113</span> <span id="114"> 114</span> <span id="115"> 115</span> <span id="116"> 116</span> <span id="117"> 117</span> <span id="118"> 118</span> <span id="119"> 119</span> <span id="120"> 120</span> <span id="121"> 121</span> <span id="122"> 122</span> <span id="123"> 123</span> <span id="124"> 124</span> <span id="125"> 125</span> <span id="126"> 126</span> <span id="127"> 127</span> <span id="128"> 128</span> <span id="129"> 129</span> <span id="130"> 130</span> <span id="131"> 131</span> <span id="132"> 132</span> <span id="133"> 133</span> <span id="134"> 134</span> <span id="135"> 135</span> <span id="136"> 136</span> <span id="137"> 137</span> <span id="138"> 138</span> <span id="139"> 139</span> <span id="140"> 140</span> <span id="141"> 141</span> <span id="142"> 142</span> <span id="143"> 143</span> <span id="144"> 144</span> <span id="145"> 145</span> <span id="146"> 146</span> <span id="147"> 147</span> <span id="148"> 148</span> <span id="149"> 149</span> <span id="150"> 150</span> <span id="151"> 151</span> <span id="152"> 152</span> <span id="153"> 153</span> <span id="154"> 154</span> <span id="155"> 155</span> <span id="156"> 156</span> <span id="157"> 157</span> <span id="158"> 158</span> <span id="159"> 159</span> <span id="160"> 160</span> <span id="161"> 161</span> <span id="162"> 162</span> <span id="163"> 163</span> <span id="164"> 164</span> <span id="165"> 165</span> <span id="166"> 166</span> <span id="167"> 167</span> <span id="168"> 168</span> <span id="169"> 169</span> <span id="170"> 170</span> <span id="171"> 171</span> <span id="172"> 172</span> <span id="173"> 173</span> <span id="174"> 174</span> <span id="175"> 175</span> <span id="176"> 176</span> <span id="177"> 177</span> <span id="178"> 178</span> <span id="179"> 179</span> <span id="180"> 180</span> <span id="181"> 181</span> <span id="182"> 182</span> <span id="183"> 183</span> <span id="184"> 184</span> <span id="185"> 185</span> <span id="186"> 186</span> <span id="187"> 187</span> <span id="188"> 188</span> <span id="189"> 189</span> <span id="190"> 190</span> <span id="191"> 191</span> <span id="192"> 192</span> <span id="193"> 193</span> <span id="194"> 194</span> <span id="195"> 195</span> <span id="196"> 196</span> <span id="197"> 197</span> <span id="198"> 198</span> <span id="199"> 199</span> <span id="200"> 200</span> <span id="201"> 201</span> <span id="202"> 202</span> <span id="203"> 203</span> <span id="204"> 204</span> <span id="205"> 205</span> <span id="206"> 206</span> <span id="207"> 207</span> <span id="208"> 208</span> <span id="209"> 209</span> <span id="210"> 210</span> <span id="211"> 211</span> <span id="212"> 212</span> <span id="213"> 213</span> <span id="214"> 214</span> <span id="215"> 215</span> <span id="216"> 216</span> <span id="217"> 217</span> <span id="218"> 218</span> <span id="219"> 219</span> <span id="220"> 220</span> <span id="221"> 221</span> <span id="222"> 222</span> <span id="223"> 223</span> <span id="224"> 224</span> <span id="225"> 225</span> <span id="226"> 226</span> <span id="227"> 227</span> <span id="228"> 228</span> <span id="229"> 229</span> <span id="230"> 230</span> <span id="231"> 231</span> <span id="232"> 232</span> <span id="233"> 233</span> <span id="234"> 234</span> <span id="235"> 235</span> <span id="236"> 236</span> <span id="237"> 237</span> <span id="238"> 238</span> <span id="239"> 239</span> <span id="240"> 240</span> <span id="241"> 241</span> <span id="242"> 242</span> <span id="243"> 243</span> <span id="244"> 244</span> <span id="245"> 245</span> <span id="246"> 246</span> <span id="247"> 247</span> <span id="248"> 248</span> <span id="249"> 249</span> <span id="250"> 250</span> <span id="251"> 251</span> <span id="252"> 252</span> <span id="253"> 253</span> <span id="254"> 254</span> <span id="255"> 255</span> <span id="256"> 256</span> <span id="257"> 257</span> <span id="258"> 258</span> <span id="259"> 259</span> <span id="260"> 260</span> <span id="261"> 261</span> <span id="262"> 262</span> <span id="263"> 263</span> <span id="264"> 264</span> <span id="265"> 265</span> <span id="266"> 266</span> <span id="267"> 267</span> <span id="268"> 268</span> <span id="269"> 269</span> <span id="270"> 270</span> <span id="271"> 271</span> <span id="272"> 272</span> <span id="273"> 273</span> <span id="274"> 274</span> <span id="275"> 275</span> <span id="276"> 276</span> <span id="277"> 277</span> <span id="278"> 278</span> <span id="279"> 279</span> <span id="280"> 280</span> <span id="281"> 281</span> <span id="282"> 282</span> <span id="283"> 283</span> <span id="284"> 284</span> <span id="285"> 285</span> <span id="286"> 286</span> <span id="287"> 287</span> <span id="288"> 288</span> <span id="289"> 289</span> <span id="290"> 290</span> <span id="291"> 291</span> <span id="292"> 292</span> <span id="293"> 293</span> <span id="294"> 294</span> <span id="295"> 295</span> <span id="296"> 296</span> <span id="297"> 297</span> <span id="298"> 298</span> <span id="299"> 299</span> <span id="300"> 300</span> <span id="301"> 301</span> <span id="302"> 302</span> <span id="303"> 303</span> <span id="304"> 304</span> <span id="305"> 305</span> <span id="306"> 306</span> <span id="307"> 307</span> <span id="308"> 308</span> <span id="309"> 309</span> <span id="310"> 310</span> <span id="311"> 311</span> <span id="312"> 312</span> <span id="313"> 313</span> <span id="314"> 314</span> <span id="315"> 315</span> <span id="316"> 316</span> <span id="317"> 317</span> <span id="318"> 318</span> <span id="319"> 319</span> <span id="320"> 320</span> <span id="321"> 321</span> <span id="322"> 322</span> <span id="323"> 323</span> <span id="324"> 324</span> <span id="325"> 325</span> <span id="326"> 326</span> <span id="327"> 327</span> <span id="328"> 328</span> <span id="329"> 329</span> <span id="330"> 330</span> <span id="331"> 331</span> <span id="332"> 332</span> <span id="333"> 333</span> <span id="334"> 334</span> <span id="335"> 335</span> <span id="336"> 336</span> <span id="337"> 337</span> <span id="338"> 338</span> <span id="339"> 339</span> <span id="340"> 340</span> <span id="341"> 341</span> <span id="342"> 342</span> <span id="343"> 343</span> <span id="344"> 344</span> <span id="345"> 345</span> <span id="346"> 346</span> <span id="347"> 347</span> <span id="348"> 348</span> <span id="349"> 349</span> <span id="350"> 350</span> <span id="351"> 351</span> <span id="352"> 352</span> <span id="353"> 353</span> <span id="354"> 354</span> <span id="355"> 355</span> <span id="356"> 356</span> <span id="357"> 357</span> <span id="358"> 358</span> <span id="359"> 359</span> <span id="360"> 360</span> <span id="361"> 361</span> <span id="362"> 362</span> <span id="363"> 363</span> <span id="364"> 364</span> <span id="365"> 365</span> <span id="366"> 366</span> <span id="367"> 367</span> <span id="368"> 368</span> <span id="369"> 369</span> <span id="370"> 370</span> <span id="371"> 371</span> <span id="372"> 372</span> <span id="373"> 373</span> <span id="374"> 374</span> <span id="375"> 375</span> <span id="376"> 376</span> <span id="377"> 377</span> <span id="378"> 378</span> <span id="379"> 379</span> <span id="380"> 380</span> <span id="381"> 381</span> <span id="382"> 382</span> <span id="383"> 383</span> <span id="384"> 384</span> <span id="385"> 385</span> <span id="386"> 386</span> <span id="387"> 387</span> <span id="388"> 388</span> <span id="389"> 389</span> <span id="390"> 390</span> <span id="391"> 391</span> <span id="392"> 392</span> <span id="393"> 393</span> <span id="394"> 394</span> <span id="395"> 395</span> <span id="396"> 396</span> <span id="397"> 397</span> <span id="398"> 398</span> <span id="399"> 399</span> <span id="400"> 400</span> <span id="401"> 401</span> <span id="402"> 402</span> <span id="403"> 403</span> <span id="404"> 404</span> <span id="405"> 405</span> <span id="406"> 406</span> <span id="407"> 407</span> <span id="408"> 408</span> <span id="409"> 409</span> <span id="410"> 410</span> <span id="411"> 411</span> <span id="412"> 412</span> <span id="413"> 413</span> <span id="414"> 414</span> <span id="415"> 415</span> <span id="416"> 416</span> <span id="417"> 417</span> <span id="418"> 418</span> <span id="419"> 419</span> <span id="420"> 420</span> <span id="421"> 421</span> <span id="422"> 422</span> <span id="423"> 423</span> <span id="424"> 424</span> <span id="425"> 425</span> <span id="426"> 426</span> <span id="427"> 427</span> <span id="428"> 428</span> <span id="429"> 429</span> <span id="430"> 430</span> <span id="431"> 431</span> <span id="432"> 432</span> <span id="433"> 433</span> <span id="434"> 434</span> <span id="435"> 435</span> <span id="436"> 436</span> <span id="437"> 437</span> <span id="438"> 438</span> <span id="439"> 439</span> <span id="440"> 440</span> <span id="441"> 441</span> <span id="442"> 442</span> <span id="443"> 443</span> <span id="444"> 444</span> <span id="445"> 445</span> <span id="446"> 446</span> <span id="447"> 447</span> <span id="448"> 448</span> <span id="449"> 449</span> <span id="450"> 450</span> <span id="451"> 451</span> <span id="452"> 452</span> <span id="453"> 453</span> <span id="454"> 454</span> <span id="455"> 455</span> <span id="456"> 456</span> <span id="457"> 457</span> <span id="458"> 458</span> <span id="459"> 459</span> <span id="460"> 460</span> <span id="461"> 461</span> <span id="462"> 462</span> <span id="463"> 463</span> <span id="464"> 464</span> <span id="465"> 465</span> <span id="466"> 466</span> <span id="467"> 467</span> <span id="468"> 468</span> <span id="469"> 469</span> <span id="470"> 470</span> <span id="471"> 471</span> <span id="472"> 472</span> <span id="473"> 473</span> <span id="474"> 474</span> <span id="475"> 475</span> <span id="476"> 476</span> <span id="477"> 477</span> <span id="478"> 478</span> <span id="479"> 479</span> <span id="480"> 480</span> <span id="481"> 481</span> <span id="482"> 482</span> <span id="483"> 483</span> <span id="484"> 484</span> <span id="485"> 485</span> <span id="486"> 486</span> <span id="487"> 487</span> <span id="488"> 488</span> <span id="489"> 489</span> <span id="490"> 490</span> <span id="491"> 491</span> <span id="492"> 492</span> <span id="493"> 493</span> <span id="494"> 494</span> <span id="495"> 495</span> <span id="496"> 496</span> <span id="497"> 497</span> <span id="498"> 498</span> <span id="499"> 499</span> <span id="500"> 500</span> <span id="501"> 501</span> <span id="502"> 502</span> <span id="503"> 503</span> <span id="504"> 504</span> <span id="505"> 505</span> <span id="506"> 506</span> <span id="507"> 507</span> <span id="508"> 508</span> <span id="509"> 509</span> <span id="510"> 510</span> <span id="511"> 511</span> <span id="512"> 512</span> <span id="513"> 513</span> <span id="514"> 514</span> <span id="515"> 515</span> <span id="516"> 516</span> <span id="517"> 517</span> <span id="518"> 518</span> <span id="519"> 519</span> <span id="520"> 520</span> <span id="521"> 521</span> <span id="522"> 522</span> <span id="523"> 523</span> <span id="524"> 524</span> <span id="525"> 525</span> <span id="526"> 526</span> <span id="527"> 527</span> <span id="528"> 528</span> <span id="529"> 529</span> <span id="530"> 530</span> <span id="531"> 531</span> <span id="532"> 532</span> <span id="533"> 533</span> <span id="534"> 534</span> <span id="535"> 535</span> <span id="536"> 536</span> <span id="537"> 537</span> <span id="538"> 538</span> <span id="539"> 539</span> <span id="540"> 540</span> <span id="541"> 541</span> <span id="542"> 542</span> <span id="543"> 543</span> <span id="544"> 544</span> <span id="545"> 545</span> <span id="546"> 546</span> <span id="547"> 547</span> <span id="548"> 548</span> <span id="549"> 549</span> <span id="550"> 550</span> <span id="551"> 551</span> <span id="552"> 552</span> <span id="553"> 553</span> <span id="554"> 554</span> <span id="555"> 555</span> <span id="556"> 556</span> <span id="557"> 557</span> <span id="558"> 558</span> <span id="559"> 559</span> <span id="560"> 560</span> <span id="561"> 561</span> <span id="562"> 562</span> <span id="563"> 563</span> <span id="564"> 564</span> <span id="565"> 565</span> <span id="566"> 566</span> <span id="567"> 567</span> <span id="568"> 568</span> <span id="569"> 569</span> <span id="570"> 570</span> <span id="571"> 571</span> <span id="572"> 572</span> <span id="573"> 573</span> <span id="574"> 574</span> <span id="575"> 575</span> <span id="576"> 576</span> <span id="577"> 577</span> <span id="578"> 578</span> <span id="579"> 579</span> <span id="580"> 580</span> <span id="581"> 581</span> <span id="582"> 582</span> <span id="583"> 583</span> <span id="584"> 584</span> <span id="585"> 585</span> <span id="586"> 586</span> <span id="587"> 587</span> <span id="588"> 588</span> <span id="589"> 589</span> <span id="590"> 590</span> <span id="591"> 591</span> <span id="592"> 592</span> <span id="593"> 593</span> <span id="594"> 594</span> <span id="595"> 595</span> <span id="596"> 596</span> <span id="597"> 597</span> <span id="598"> 598</span> <span id="599"> 599</span> <span id="600"> 600</span> <span id="601"> 601</span> <span id="602"> 602</span> <span id="603"> 603</span> <span id="604"> 604</span> <span id="605"> 605</span> <span id="606"> 606</span> <span id="607"> 607</span> <span id="608"> 608</span> <span id="609"> 609</span> <span id="610"> 610</span> <span id="611"> 611</span> <span id="612"> 612</span> <span id="613"> 613</span> <span id="614"> 614</span> <span id="615"> 615</span> <span id="616"> 616</span> <span id="617"> 617</span> <span id="618"> 618</span> <span id="619"> 619</span> <span id="620"> 620</span> <span id="621"> 621</span> <span id="622"> 622</span> <span id="623"> 623</span> <span id="624"> 624</span> <span id="625"> 625</span> <span id="626"> 626</span> <span id="627"> 627</span> <span id="628"> 628</span> <span id="629"> 629</span> <span id="630"> 630</span> <span id="631"> 631</span> <span id="632"> 632</span> <span id="633"> 633</span> <span id="634"> 634</span> <span id="635"> 635</span> <span id="636"> 636</span> <span id="637"> 637</span> <span id="638"> 638</span> <span id="639"> 639</span> <span id="640"> 640</span> <span id="641"> 641</span> <span id="642"> 642</span> <span id="643"> 643</span> <span id="644"> 644</span> <span id="645"> 645</span> <span id="646"> 646</span> <span id="647"> 647</span> <span id="648"> 648</span> <span id="649"> 649</span> <span id="650"> 650</span> <span id="651"> 651</span> <span id="652"> 652</span> <span id="653"> 653</span> <span id="654"> 654</span> <span id="655"> 655</span> <span id="656"> 656</span> <span id="657"> 657</span> <span id="658"> 658</span> <span id="659"> 659</span> <span id="660"> 660</span> <span id="661"> 661</span> <span id="662"> 662</span> <span id="663"> 663</span> <span id="664"> 664</span> <span id="665"> 665</span> <span id="666"> 666</span> <span id="667"> 667</span> <span id="668"> 668</span> <span id="669"> 669</span> <span id="670"> 670</span> <span id="671"> 671</span> <span id="672"> 672</span> <span id="673"> 673</span> <span id="674"> 674</span> <span id="675"> 675</span> <span id="676"> 676</span> <span id="677"> 677</span> <span id="678"> 678</span> <span id="679"> 679</span> <span id="680"> 680</span> <span id="681"> 681</span> <span id="682"> 682</span> <span id="683"> 683</span> <span id="684"> 684</span> <span id="685"> 685</span> <span id="686"> 686</span> <span id="687"> 687</span> <span id="688"> 688</span> <span id="689"> 689</span> <span id="690"> 690</span> <span id="691"> 691</span> <span id="692"> 692</span> <span id="693"> 693</span> <span id="694"> 694</span> <span id="695"> 695</span> <span id="696"> 696</span> <span id="697"> 697</span> <span id="698"> 698</span> <span id="699"> 699</span> <span id="700"> 700</span> <span id="701"> 701</span> <span id="702"> 702</span> <span id="703"> 703</span> <span id="704"> 704</span> <span id="705"> 705</span> <span id="706"> 706</span> <span id="707"> 707</span> <span id="708"> 708</span> <span id="709"> 709</span> <span id="710"> 710</span> <span id="711"> 711</span> <span id="712"> 712</span> <span id="713"> 713</span> <span id="714"> 714</span> <span id="715"> 715</span> <span id="716"> 716</span> <span id="717"> 717</span> <span id="718"> 718</span> <span id="719"> 719</span> <span id="720"> 720</span> <span id="721"> 721</span> <span id="722"> 722</span> <span id="723"> 723</span> <span id="724"> 724</span> <span id="725"> 725</span> <span id="726"> 726</span> <span id="727"> 727</span> <span id="728"> 728</span> <span id="729"> 729</span> <span id="730"> 730</span> <span id="731"> 731</span> <span id="732"> 732</span> <span id="733"> 733</span> <span id="734"> 734</span> <span id="735"> 735</span> <span id="736"> 736</span> <span id="737"> 737</span> <span id="738"> 738</span> <span id="739"> 739</span> <span id="740"> 740</span> <span id="741"> 741</span> <span id="742"> 742</span> <span id="743"> 743</span> <span id="744"> 744</span> <span id="745"> 745</span> <span id="746"> 746</span> <span id="747"> 747</span> <span id="748"> 748</span> <span id="749"> 749</span> <span id="750"> 750</span> <span id="751"> 751</span> <span id="752"> 752</span> <span id="753"> 753</span> <span id="754"> 754</span> <span id="755"> 755</span> <span id="756"> 756</span> <span id="757"> 757</span> <span id="758"> 758</span> <span id="759"> 759</span> <span id="760"> 760</span> <span id="761"> 761</span> <span id="762"> 762</span> <span id="763"> 763</span> <span id="764"> 764</span> <span id="765"> 765</span> <span id="766"> 766</span> <span id="767"> 767</span> <span id="768"> 768</span> <span id="769"> 769</span> <span id="770"> 770</span> <span id="771"> 771</span> <span id="772"> 772</span> <span id="773"> 773</span> <span id="774"> 774</span> <span id="775"> 775</span> <span id="776"> 776</span> <span id="777"> 777</span> <span id="778"> 778</span> <span id="779"> 779</span> <span id="780"> 780</span> <span id="781"> 781</span> <span id="782"> 782</span> <span id="783"> 783</span> <span id="784"> 784</span> <span id="785"> 785</span> <span id="786"> 786</span> <span id="787"> 787</span> <span id="788"> 788</span> <span id="789"> 789</span> <span id="790"> 790</span> <span id="791"> 791</span> <span id="792"> 792</span> <span id="793"> 793</span> <span id="794"> 794</span> <span id="795"> 795</span> <span id="796"> 796</span> <span id="797"> 797</span> <span id="798"> 798</span> <span id="799"> 799</span> <span id="800"> 800</span> <span id="801"> 801</span> <span id="802"> 802</span> <span id="803"> 803</span> <span id="804"> 804</span> <span id="805"> 805</span> <span id="806"> 806</span> <span id="807"> 807</span> <span id="808"> 808</span> <span id="809"> 809</span> <span id="810"> 810</span> <span id="811"> 811</span> <span id="812"> 812</span> <span id="813"> 813</span> <span id="814"> 814</span> <span id="815"> 815</span> <span id="816"> 816</span> <span id="817"> 817</span> <span id="818"> 818</span> <span id="819"> 819</span> <span id="820"> 820</span> <span id="821"> 821</span> <span id="822"> 822</span> <span id="823"> 823</span> <span id="824"> 824</span> <span id="825"> 825</span> <span id="826"> 826</span> <span id="827"> 827</span> <span id="828"> 828</span> <span id="829"> 829</span> <span id="830"> 830</span> <span id="831"> 831</span> <span id="832"> 832</span> <span id="833"> 833</span> <span id="834"> 834</span> <span id="835"> 835</span> <span id="836"> 836</span> <span id="837"> 837</span> <span id="838"> 838</span> <span id="839"> 839</span> <span id="840"> 840</span> <span id="841"> 841</span> <span id="842"> 842</span> <span id="843"> 843</span> <span id="844"> 844</span> <span id="845"> 845</span> <span id="846"> 846</span> <span id="847"> 847</span> <span id="848"> 848</span> <span id="849"> 849</span> <span id="850"> 850</span> <span id="851"> 851</span> <span id="852"> 852</span> <span id="853"> 853</span> <span id="854"> 854</span> <span id="855"> 855</span> <span id="856"> 856</span> <span id="857"> 857</span> <span id="858"> 858</span> <span id="859"> 859</span> <span id="860"> 860</span> <span id="861"> 861</span> <span id="862"> 862</span> <span id="863"> 863</span> <span id="864"> 864</span> <span id="865"> 865</span> <span id="866"> 866</span> <span id="867"> 867</span> <span id="868"> 868</span> <span id="869"> 869</span> <span id="870"> 870</span> <span id="871"> 871</span> <span id="872"> 872</span> <span id="873"> 873</span> <span id="874"> 874</span> <span id="875"> 875</span> <span id="876"> 876</span> <span id="877"> 877</span> <span id="878"> 878</span> <span id="879"> 879</span> <span id="880"> 880</span> <span id="881"> 881</span> <span id="882"> 882</span> <span id="883"> 883</span> <span id="884"> 884</span> <span id="885"> 885</span> <span id="886"> 886</span> <span id="887"> 887</span> <span id="888"> 888</span> <span id="889"> 889</span> <span id="890"> 890</span> <span id="891"> 891</span> <span id="892"> 892</span> <span id="893"> 893</span> <span id="894"> 894</span> <span id="895"> 895</span> <span id="896"> 896</span> <span id="897"> 897</span> <span id="898"> 898</span> <span id="899"> 899</span> <span id="900"> 900</span> <span id="901"> 901</span> <span id="902"> 902</span> <span id="903"> 903</span> <span id="904"> 904</span> <span id="905"> 905</span> <span id="906"> 906</span> <span id="907"> 907</span> <span id="908"> 908</span> <span id="909"> 909</span> <span id="910"> 910</span> <span id="911"> 911</span> <span id="912"> 912</span> <span id="913"> 913</span> <span id="914"> 914</span> <span id="915"> 915</span> <span id="916"> 916</span> <span id="917"> 917</span> <span id="918"> 918</span> <span id="919"> 919</span> <span id="920"> 920</span> <span id="921"> 921</span> <span id="922"> 922</span> <span id="923"> 923</span> <span id="924"> 924</span> <span id="925"> 925</span> <span id="926"> 926</span> <span id="927"> 927</span> <span id="928"> 928</span> <span id="929"> 929</span> <span id="930"> 930</span> <span id="931"> 931</span> <span id="932"> 932</span> <span id="933"> 933</span> <span id="934"> 934</span> <span id="935"> 935</span> <span id="936"> 936</span> <span id="937"> 937</span> <span id="938"> 938</span> <span id="939"> 939</span> <span id="940"> 940</span> <span id="941"> 941</span> <span id="942"> 942</span> <span id="943"> 943</span> <span id="944"> 944</span> <span id="945"> 945</span> <span id="946"> 946</span> <span id="947"> 947</span> <span id="948"> 948</span> <span id="949"> 949</span> <span id="950"> 950</span> <span id="951"> 951</span> <span id="952"> 952</span> <span id="953"> 953</span> <span id="954"> 954</span> <span id="955"> 955</span> <span id="956"> 956</span> <span id="957"> 957</span> <span id="958"> 958</span> <span id="959"> 959</span> <span id="960"> 960</span> <span id="961"> 961</span> <span id="962"> 962</span> <span id="963"> 963</span> <span id="964"> 964</span> <span id="965"> 965</span> <span id="966"> 966</span> <span id="967"> 967</span> <span id="968"> 968</span> <span id="969"> 969</span> <span id="970"> 970</span> <span id="971"> 971</span> <span id="972"> 972</span> <span id="973"> 973</span> <span id="974"> 974</span> <span id="975"> 975</span> <span id="976"> 976</span> <span id="977"> 977</span> <span id="978"> 978</span> <span id="979"> 979</span> <span id="980"> 980</span> <span id="981"> 981</span> <span id="982"> 982</span> <span id="983"> 983</span> <span id="984"> 984</span> <span id="985"> 985</span> <span id="986"> 986</span> <span id="987"> 987</span> <span id="988"> 988</span> <span id="989"> 989</span> <span id="990"> 990</span> <span id="991"> 991</span> <span id="992"> 992</span> <span id="993"> 993</span> <span id="994"> 994</span> <span id="995"> 995</span> <span id="996"> 996</span> <span id="997"> 997</span> <span id="998"> 998</span> <span id="999"> 999</span> <span id="1000">1000</span> <span id="1001">1001</span> <span id="1002">1002</span> <span id="1003">1003</span> <span id="1004">1004</span> <span id="1005">1005</span> <span id="1006">1006</span> <span id="1007">1007</span> <span id="1008">1008</span> <span id="1009">1009</span> <span id="1010">1010</span> <span id="1011">1011</span> <span id="1012">1012</span> <span id="1013">1013</span> <span id="1014">1014</span> <span id="1015">1015</span> <span id="1016">1016</span> <span id="1017">1017</span> <span id="1018">1018</span> <span id="1019">1019</span> <span id="1020">1020</span> <span id="1021">1021</span> <span id="1022">1022</span> <span id="1023">1023</span> <span id="1024">1024</span> <span id="1025">1025</span> <span id="1026">1026</span> <span id="1027">1027</span> <span id="1028">1028</span> <span id="1029">1029</span> <span id="1030">1030</span> <span id="1031">1031</span> <span id="1032">1032</span> <span id="1033">1033</span> <span id="1034">1034</span> <span id="1035">1035</span> <span id="1036">1036</span> <span id="1037">1037</span> <span id="1038">1038</span> <span id="1039">1039</span> <span id="1040">1040</span> <span id="1041">1041</span> <span id="1042">1042</span> <span id="1043">1043</span> <span id="1044">1044</span> <span id="1045">1045</span> <span id="1046">1046</span> <span id="1047">1047</span> <span id="1048">1048</span> <span id="1049">1049</span> <span id="1050">1050</span> <span id="1051">1051</span> <span id="1052">1052</span> <span id="1053">1053</span> <span id="1054">1054</span> <span id="1055">1055</span> <span id="1056">1056</span> <span id="1057">1057</span> <span id="1058">1058</span> <span id="1059">1059</span> <span id="1060">1060</span> <span id="1061">1061</span> <span id="1062">1062</span> <span id="1063">1063</span> <span id="1064">1064</span> <span id="1065">1065</span> <span id="1066">1066</span> <span id="1067">1067</span> <span id="1068">1068</span> <span id="1069">1069</span> <span id="1070">1070</span> <span id="1071">1071</span> <span id="1072">1072</span> <span id="1073">1073</span> <span id="1074">1074</span> <span id="1075">1075</span> <span id="1076">1076</span> <span id="1077">1077</span> <span id="1078">1078</span> <span id="1079">1079</span> <span id="1080">1080</span> <span id="1081">1081</span> <span id="1082">1082</span> <span id="1083">1083</span> <span id="1084">1084</span> <span id="1085">1085</span> <span id="1086">1086</span> </pre><pre class="rust "> <span class="comment">// Copyright 2015 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT</span> <span class="comment">// file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at</span> <span class="comment">// http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT.</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="comment">// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or</span> <span class="comment">// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license</span> <span class="comment">// <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your</span> <span class="comment">// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed</span> <span class="comment">// except according to those terms.</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"bool"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The boolean type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `bool` represents a value, which could only be either `true` or `false`. If you cast</span> <span class="doccomment">/// a `bool` into an integer, `true` will be 1 and `false` will be 0.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Basic usage</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `bool` implements various traits, such as [`BitAnd`], [`BitOr`], [`Not`], etc.,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// which allow us to perform boolean operations using `&`, `|` and `!`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`if`] always demands a `bool` value. [`assert!`], being an important macro in testing,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// checks whether an expression returns `true`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let bool_val = true & false | false;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert!(!bool_val);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`assert!`]: macro.assert.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`if`]: ../book/first-edition/if.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`BitAnd`]: ops/trait.BitAnd.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`BitOr`]: ops/trait.BitOr.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Not`]: ops/trait.Not.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Examples</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A trivial example of the usage of `bool`,</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let praise_the_borrow_checker = true;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // using the `if` conditional</span> <span class="doccomment">/// if praise_the_borrow_checker {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// println!("oh, yeah!");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// } else {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// println!("what?!!");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // ... or, a match pattern</span> <span class="doccomment">/// match praise_the_borrow_checker {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// true => println!("keep praising!"),</span> <span class="doccomment">/// false => println!("you should praise!"),</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Also, since `bool` implements the [`Copy`](marker/trait.Copy.html) trait, we don't</span> <span class="doccomment">/// have to worry about the move semantics (just like the integer and float primitives).</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Now an example of `bool` cast to integer type:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(true as i32, 1);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(false as i32, 0);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_bool</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"never"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `!` type, also called "never".</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `!` represents the type of computations which never resolve to any value at all. For example,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// the [`exit`] function `fn exit(code: i32) -> !` exits the process without ever returning, and</span> <span class="doccomment">/// so returns `!`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `break`, `continue` and `return` expressions also have type `!`. For example we are allowed to</span> <span class="doccomment">/// write:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// #![feature(never_type)]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # fn foo() -> u32 {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let x: ! = {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// return 123</span> <span class="doccomment">/// };</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Although the `let` is pointless here, it illustrates the meaning of `!`. Since `x` is never</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assigned a value (because `return` returns from the entire function), `x` can be given type</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `!`. We could also replace `return 123` with a `panic!` or a never-ending `loop` and this code</span> <span class="doccomment">/// would still be valid.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A more realistic usage of `!` is in this code:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # fn get_a_number() -> Option<u32> { None }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # loop {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let num: u32 = match get_a_number() {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Some(num) => num,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// None => break,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// };</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Both match arms must produce values of type [`u32`], but since `break` never produces a value</span> <span class="doccomment">/// at all we know it can never produce a value which isn't a [`u32`]. This illustrates another</span> <span class="doccomment">/// behaviour of the `!` type - expressions with type `!` will coerce into any other type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`u32`]: primitive.str.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`exit`]: process/fn.exit.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # `!` and generics</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The main place you'll see `!` used explicitly is in generic code. Consider the [`FromStr`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// trait:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// trait FromStr: Sized {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// type Err;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err>;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// When implementing this trait for [`String`] we need to pick a type for [`Err`]. And since</span> <span class="doccomment">/// converting a string into a string will never result in an error, the appropriate type is `!`.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// (Currently the type actually used is an enum with no variants, though this is only because `!`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// was added to Rust at a later date and it may change in the future). With an [`Err`] type of</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `!`, if we have to call [`String::from_str`] for some reason the result will be a</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Result<String, !>`] which we can unpack like this:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```ignore (string-from-str-error-type-is-not-never-yet)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // NOTE: This does not work today!</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let Ok(s) = String::from_str("hello");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Since the [`Err`] variant contains a `!`, it can never occur. So we can exhaustively match on</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Result<T, !>`] by just taking the [`Ok`] variant. This illustrates another behaviour of `!` -</span> <span class="doccomment">/// it can be used to "delete" certain enum variants from generic types like `Result`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`String::from_str`]: str/trait.FromStr.html#tymethod.from_str</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Result<String, !>`]: result/enum.Result.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Result<T, !>`]: result/enum.Result.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Ok`]: result/enum.Result.html#variant.Ok</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`String`]: string/struct.String.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Err`]: result/enum.Result.html#variant.Err</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`FromStr`]: str/trait.FromStr.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # `!` and traits</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// When writing your own traits, `!` should have an `impl` whenever there is an obvious `impl`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// which doesn't `panic!`. As is turns out, most traits can have an `impl` for `!`. Take [`Debug`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// for example:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # #![feature(never_type)]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # use std::fmt;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # trait Debug {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # fn fmt(&self, formatter: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// impl Debug for ! {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn fmt(&self, formatter: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *self</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Once again we're using `!`'s ability to coerce into any other type, in this case</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`fmt::Result`]. Since this method takes a `&!` as an argument we know that it can never be</span> <span class="doccomment">/// called (because there is no value of type `!` for it to be called with). Writing `*self`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// essentially tells the compiler "We know that this code can never be run, so just treat the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// entire function body has having type [`fmt::Result`]". This pattern can be used a lot when</span> <span class="doccomment">/// implementing traits for `!`. Generally, any trait which only has methods which take a `self`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// parameter should have such as impl.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// On the other hand, one trait which would not be appropriate to implement is [`Default`]:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// trait Default {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn default() -> Self;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Since `!` has no values, it has no default value either. It's true that we could write an</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `impl` for this which simply panics, but the same is true for any type (we could `impl</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Default` for (eg.) [`File`] by just making [`default()`] panic.)</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`fmt::Result`]: fmt/type.Result.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`File`]: fs/struct.File.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Debug`]: fmt/trait.Debug.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Default`]: default/trait.Default.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`default()`]: default/trait.Default.html#tymethod.default</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">unstable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"never_type"</span>, <span class="ident">issue</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"35121"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_never</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"char"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A character type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `char` type represents a single character. More specifically, since</span> <span class="doccomment">/// 'character' isn't a well-defined concept in Unicode, `char` is a '[Unicode</span> <span class="doccomment">/// scalar value]', which is similar to, but not the same as, a '[Unicode code</span> <span class="doccomment">/// point]'.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [Unicode scalar value]: http://www.unicode.org/glossary/#unicode_scalar_value</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [Unicode code point]: http://www.unicode.org/glossary/#code_point</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// This documentation describes a number of methods and trait implementations on the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `char` type. For technical reasons, there is additional, separate</span> <span class="doccomment">/// documentation in [the `std::char` module](char/index.html) as well.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Representation</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `char` is always four bytes in size. This is a different representation than</span> <span class="doccomment">/// a given character would have as part of a [`String`]. For example:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let v = vec!['h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o'];</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // five elements times four bytes for each element</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(20, v.len() * std::mem::size_of::<char>());</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let s = String::from("hello");</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // five elements times one byte per element</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(5, s.len() * std::mem::size_of::<u8>());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`String`]: string/struct.String.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// As always, remember that a human intuition for 'character' may not map to</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Unicode's definitions. For example, despite looking similar, the 'é'</span> <span class="doccomment">/// character is one Unicode code point while 'é' is two Unicode code points:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let mut chars = "é".chars();</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // U+00e9: 'latin small letter e with acute'</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(Some('\u{00e9}'), chars.next());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(None, chars.next());</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let mut chars = "é".chars();</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // U+0065: 'latin small letter e'</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(Some('\u{0065}'), chars.next());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // U+0301: 'combining acute accent'</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(Some('\u{0301}'), chars.next());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(None, chars.next());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// This means that the contents of the first string above _will_ fit into a</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `char` while the contents of the second string _will not_. Trying to create</span> <span class="doccomment">/// a `char` literal with the contents of the second string gives an error:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```text</span> <span class="doccomment">/// error: character literal may only contain one codepoint: 'é'</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let c = 'é';</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ^^^^</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Another implication of the 4-byte fixed size of a `char` is that</span> <span class="doccomment">/// per-`char` processing can end up using a lot more memory:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let s = String::from("love: ❤️");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let v: Vec<char> = s.chars().collect();</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(12, s.len() * std::mem::size_of::<u8>());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(32, v.len() * std::mem::size_of::<char>());</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_char</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"unit"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `()` type, sometimes called "unit" or "nil".</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `()` type has exactly one value `()`, and is used when there</span> <span class="doccomment">/// is no other meaningful value that could be returned. `()` is most</span> <span class="doccomment">/// commonly seen implicitly: functions without a `-> ...` implicitly</span> <span class="doccomment">/// have return type `()`, that is, these are equivalent:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```rust</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn long() -> () {}</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn short() {}</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The semicolon `;` can be used to discard the result of an</span> <span class="doccomment">/// expression at the end of a block, making the expression (and thus</span> <span class="doccomment">/// the block) evaluate to `()`. For example,</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```rust</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn returns_i64() -> i64 {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// 1i64</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn returns_unit() {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// 1i64;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let is_i64 = {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// returns_i64()</span> <span class="doccomment">/// };</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let is_unit = {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// returns_i64();</span> <span class="doccomment">/// };</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_unit</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"pointer"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Raw, unsafe pointers, `*const T`, and `*mut T`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Working with raw pointers in Rust is uncommon,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// typically limited to a few patterns.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Use the [`null`] and [`null_mut`] functions to create null pointers, and the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`is_null`] method of the `*const T` and `*mut T` types to check for null.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `*const T` and `*mut T` types also define the [`offset`] method, for</span> <span class="doccomment">/// pointer math.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Common ways to create raw pointers</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ## 1. Coerce a reference (`&T`) or mutable reference (`&mut T`).</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_num: i32 = 10;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_num_ptr: *const i32 = &my_num;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let mut my_speed: i32 = 88;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_speed_ptr: *mut i32 = &mut my_speed;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// To get a pointer to a boxed value, dereference the box:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_num: Box<i32> = Box::new(10);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_num_ptr: *const i32 = &*my_num;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let mut my_speed: Box<i32> = Box::new(88);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_speed_ptr: *mut i32 = &mut *my_speed;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// This does not take ownership of the original allocation</span> <span class="doccomment">/// and requires no resource management later,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// but you must not use the pointer after its lifetime.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ## 2. Consume a box (`Box<T>`).</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The [`into_raw`] function consumes a box and returns</span> <span class="doccomment">/// the raw pointer. It doesn't destroy `T` or deallocate any memory.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_speed: Box<i32> = Box::new(88);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_speed: *mut i32 = Box::into_raw(my_speed);</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // By taking ownership of the original `Box<T>` though</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // we are obligated to put it together later to be destroyed.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// unsafe {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// drop(Box::from_raw(my_speed));</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Note that here the call to [`drop`] is for clarity - it indicates</span> <span class="doccomment">/// that we are done with the given value and it should be destroyed.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ## 3. Get it from C.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # #![feature(libc)]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// extern crate libc;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// use std::mem;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn main() {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// unsafe {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let my_num: *mut i32 = libc::malloc(mem::size_of::<i32>()) as *mut i32;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// if my_num.is_null() {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// panic!("failed to allocate memory");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// libc::free(my_num as *mut libc::c_void);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Usually you wouldn't literally use `malloc` and `free` from Rust,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// but C APIs hand out a lot of pointers generally, so are a common source</span> <span class="doccomment">/// of raw pointers in Rust.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::ptr` module](ptr/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`null`]: ../std/ptr/fn.null.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`null_mut`]: ../std/ptr/fn.null_mut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`is_null`]: ../std/primitive.pointer.html#method.is_null</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`offset`]: ../std/primitive.pointer.html#method.offset</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`into_raw`]: ../std/boxed/struct.Box.html#method.into_raw</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`drop`]: ../std/mem/fn.drop.html</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_pointer</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"array"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A fixed-size array, denoted `[T; N]`, for the element type, `T`, and the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// non-negative compile-time constant size, `N`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// There are two syntactic forms for creating an array:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * A list with each element, i.e. `[x, y, z]`.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * A repeat expression `[x; N]`, which produces an array with `N` copies of `x`.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The type of `x` must be [`Copy`][copy].</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Arrays of sizes from 0 to 32 (inclusive) implement the following traits if</span> <span class="doccomment">/// the element type allows it:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`Debug`][debug]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`IntoIterator`][intoiterator] (implemented for `&[T; N]` and `&mut [T; N]`)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`PartialEq`][partialeq], [`PartialOrd`][partialord], [`Eq`][eq], [`Ord`][ord]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`Hash`][hash]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`AsRef`][asref], [`AsMut`][asmut]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`Borrow`][borrow], [`BorrowMut`][borrowmut]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// - [`Default`][default]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// This limitation on the size `N` exists because Rust does not yet support</span> <span class="doccomment">/// code that is generic over the size of an array type. `[Foo; 3]` and `[Bar; 3]`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// are instances of same generic type `[T; 3]`, but `[Foo; 3]` and `[Foo; 5]` are</span> <span class="doccomment">/// entirely different types. As a stopgap, trait implementations are</span> <span class="doccomment">/// statically generated up to size 32.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Arrays of *any* size are [`Copy`][copy] if the element type is [`Copy`][copy]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// and [`Clone`][clone] if the element type is [`Clone`][clone]. This works</span> <span class="doccomment">/// because [`Copy`][copy] and [`Clone`][clone] traits are specially known</span> <span class="doccomment">/// to the compiler.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Arrays coerce to [slices (`[T]`)][slice], so a slice method may be called on</span> <span class="doccomment">/// an array. Indeed, this provides most of the API for working with arrays.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Slices have a dynamic size and do not coerce to arrays.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// There is no way to move elements out of an array. See [`mem::replace`][replace]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// for an alternative.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Examples</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let mut array: [i32; 3] = [0; 3];</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// array[1] = 1;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// array[2] = 2;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!([1, 2], &array[1..]);</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // This loop prints: 0 1 2</span> <span class="doccomment">/// for x in &array {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// print!("{} ", x);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// An array itself is not iterable:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```compile_fail,E0277</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let array: [i32; 3] = [0; 3];</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// for x in array { }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // error: the trait bound `[i32; 3]: std::iter::Iterator` is not satisfied</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The solution is to coerce the array to a slice by calling a slice method:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # let array: [i32; 3] = [0; 3];</span> <span class="doccomment">/// for x in array.iter() { }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// If the array has 32 or fewer elements (see above), you can also use the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// array reference's [`IntoIterator`] implementation:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # let array: [i32; 3] = [0; 3];</span> <span class="doccomment">/// for x in &array { }</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [slice]: primitive.slice.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [copy]: marker/trait.Copy.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [clone]: clone/trait.Clone.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [debug]: fmt/trait.Debug.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [intoiterator]: iter/trait.IntoIterator.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [partialeq]: cmp/trait.PartialEq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [partialord]: cmp/trait.PartialOrd.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [eq]: cmp/trait.Eq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [ord]: cmp/trait.Ord.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [hash]: hash/trait.Hash.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [asref]: convert/trait.AsRef.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [asmut]: convert/trait.AsMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [borrow]: borrow/trait.Borrow.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [borrowmut]: borrow/trait.BorrowMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [default]: default/trait.Default.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [replace]: mem/fn.replace.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`IntoIterator`]: iter/trait.IntoIterator.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_array</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"slice"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A dynamically-sized view into a contiguous sequence, `[T]`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Slices are a view into a block of memory represented as a pointer and a</span> <span class="doccomment">/// length.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // slicing a Vec</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let vec = vec![1, 2, 3];</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let int_slice = &vec[..];</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // coercing an array to a slice</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let str_slice: &[&str] = &["one", "two", "three"];</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Slices are either mutable or shared. The shared slice type is `&[T]`,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// while the mutable slice type is `&mut [T]`, where `T` represents the element</span> <span class="doccomment">/// type. For example, you can mutate the block of memory that a mutable slice</span> <span class="doccomment">/// points to:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let x = &mut [1, 2, 3];</span> <span class="doccomment">/// x[1] = 7;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(x, &[1, 7, 3]);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::slice` module](slice/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_slice</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"str"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// String slices.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The `str` type, also called a 'string slice', is the most primitive string</span> <span class="doccomment">/// type. It is usually seen in its borrowed form, `&str`. It is also the type</span> <span class="doccomment">/// of string literals, `&'static str`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Strings slices are always valid UTF-8.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// This documentation describes a number of methods and trait implementations</span> <span class="doccomment">/// on the `str` type. For technical reasons, there is additional, separate</span> <span class="doccomment">/// documentation in the [`std::str`](str/index.html) module as well.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Examples</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// String literals are string slices:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let hello = "Hello, world!";</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // with an explicit type annotation</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let hello: &'static str = "Hello, world!";</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// They are `'static` because they're stored directly in the final binary, and</span> <span class="doccomment">/// so will be valid for the `'static` duration.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Representation</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A `&str` is made up of two components: a pointer to some bytes, and a</span> <span class="doccomment">/// length. You can look at these with the [`as_ptr`] and [`len`] methods:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// use std::slice;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// use std::str;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let story = "Once upon a time...";</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let ptr = story.as_ptr();</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let len = story.len();</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // story has nineteen bytes</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(19, len);</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // We can re-build a str out of ptr and len. This is all unsafe because</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // we are responsible for making sure the two components are valid:</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let s = unsafe {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // First, we build a &[u8]...</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let slice = slice::from_raw_parts(ptr, len);</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // ... and then convert that slice into a string slice</span> <span class="doccomment">/// str::from_utf8(slice)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// };</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(s, Ok(story));</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`as_ptr`]: #method.as_ptr</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`len`]: #method.len</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Note: This example shows the internals of `&str`. `unsafe` should not be</span> <span class="doccomment">/// used to get a string slice under normal circumstances. Use `as_slice`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// instead.</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_str</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"tuple"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A finite heterogeneous sequence, `(T, U, ..)`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Let's cover each of those in turn:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Tuples are *finite*. In other words, a tuple has a length. Here's a tuple</span> <span class="doccomment">/// of length `3`:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ("hello", 5, 'c');</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// 'Length' is also sometimes called 'arity' here; each tuple of a different</span> <span class="doccomment">/// length is a different, distinct type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Tuples are *heterogeneous*. This means that each element of the tuple can</span> <span class="doccomment">/// have a different type. In that tuple above, it has the type:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # let _:</span> <span class="doccomment">/// (&'static str, i32, char)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # = ("hello", 5, 'c');</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Tuples are a *sequence*. This means that they can be accessed by position;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// this is called 'tuple indexing', and it looks like this:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```rust</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let tuple = ("hello", 5, 'c');</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(tuple.0, "hello");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(tuple.1, 5);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(tuple.2, 'c');</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// For more about tuples, see [the book](../book/first-edition/primitive-types.html#tuples).</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Trait implementations</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// If every type inside a tuple implements one of the following traits, then a</span> <span class="doccomment">/// tuple itself also implements it.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Clone`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Copy`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`PartialEq`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Eq`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`PartialOrd`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Ord`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Debug`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Default`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Hash`]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Clone`]: clone/trait.Clone.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Copy`]: marker/trait.Copy.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`PartialEq`]: cmp/trait.PartialEq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Eq`]: cmp/trait.Eq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`PartialOrd`]: cmp/trait.PartialOrd.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Ord`]: cmp/trait.Ord.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Debug`]: fmt/trait.Debug.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Default`]: default/trait.Default.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Hash`]: hash/trait.Hash.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Due to a temporary restriction in Rust's type system, these traits are only</span> <span class="doccomment">/// implemented on tuples of arity 12 or less. In the future, this may change.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// # Examples</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Basic usage:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let tuple = ("hello", 5, 'c');</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(tuple.0, "hello");</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Tuples are often used as a return type when you want to return more than</span> <span class="doccomment">/// one value:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn calculate_point() -> (i32, i32) {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // Don't do a calculation, that's not the point of the example</span> <span class="doccomment">/// (4, 5)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let point = calculate_point();</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(point.0, 4);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(point.1, 5);</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// // Combining this with patterns can be nicer.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let (x, y) = calculate_point();</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(x, 4);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(y, 5);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_tuple</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"f32"</span>)]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 32-bit floating point type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::f32` module](f32/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_f32</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"f64"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 64-bit floating point type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::f64` module](f64/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_f64</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i8"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 8-bit signed integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::i8` module](i8/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `i64` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_i8</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i16"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 16-bit signed integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::i16` module](i16/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `i32` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_i16</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i32"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 32-bit signed integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::i32` module](i32/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `i16` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_i32</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i64"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 64-bit signed integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::i64` module](i64/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `i8` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_i64</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i128"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 128-bit signed integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::i128` module](i128/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `i8` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">unstable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i128"</span>, <span class="ident">issue</span><span class="op">=</span><span class="string">"35118"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_i128</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"u8"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 8-bit unsigned integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::u8` module](u8/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `u64` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_u8</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"u16"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 16-bit unsigned integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::u16` module](u16/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `u32` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_u16</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"u32"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 32-bit unsigned integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::u32` module](u32/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `u16` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_u32</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"u64"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 64-bit unsigned integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::u64` module](u64/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `u8` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_u64</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"u128"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The 128-bit unsigned integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::u128` module](u128/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `u8` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">unstable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"i128"</span>, <span class="ident">issue</span><span class="op">=</span><span class="string">"35118"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_u128</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"isize"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The pointer-sized signed integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The size of this primitive is how many bytes it takes to reference any</span> <span class="doccomment">/// location in memory. For example, on a 32 bit target, this is 4 bytes</span> <span class="doccomment">/// and on a 64 bit target, this is 8 bytes.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::isize` module](isize/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `usize` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_isize</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"usize"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The pointer-sized unsigned integer type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The size of this primitive is how many bytes it takes to reference any</span> <span class="doccomment">/// location in memory. For example, on a 32 bit target, this is 4 bytes</span> <span class="doccomment">/// and on a 64 bit target, this is 8 bytes.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *[See also the `std::usize` module](usize/index.html).*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// However, please note that examples are shared between primitive integer</span> <span class="doccomment">/// types. So it's normal if you see usage of types like `isize` in there.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_usize</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"reference"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// References, both shared and mutable.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// A reference represents a borrow of some owned value. You can get one by using the `&` or `&mut`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// operators on a value, or by using a `ref` or `ref mut` pattern.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// For those familiar with pointers, a reference is just a pointer that is assumed to not be null.</span> <span class="doccomment">/// In fact, `Option<&T>` has the same memory representation as a nullable pointer, and can be</span> <span class="doccomment">/// passed across FFI boundaries as such.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// In most cases, references can be used much like the original value. Field access, method</span> <span class="doccomment">/// calling, and indexing work the same (save for mutability rules, of course). In addition, the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// comparison operators transparently defer to the referent's implementation, allowing references</span> <span class="doccomment">/// to be compared the same as owned values.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// References have a lifetime attached to them, which represents the scope for which the borrow is</span> <span class="doccomment">/// valid. A lifetime is said to "outlive" another one if its representative scope is as long or</span> <span class="doccomment">/// longer than the other. The `'static` lifetime is the longest lifetime, which represents the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// total life of the program. For example, string literals have a `'static` lifetime because the</span> <span class="doccomment">/// text data is embedded into the binary of the program, rather than in an allocation that needs</span> <span class="doccomment">/// to be dynamically managed.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `&mut T` references can be freely coerced into `&T` references with the same referent type, and</span> <span class="doccomment">/// references with longer lifetimes can be freely coerced into references with shorter ones.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// For more information on how to use references, see [the book's section on "References and</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Borrowing"][book-refs].</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [book-refs]: ../book/second-edition/ch04-02-references-and-borrowing.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The following traits are implemented for all `&T`, regardless of the type of its referent:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Copy`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Clone`] \(Note that this will not defer to `T`'s `Clone` implementation if it exists!)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Deref`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Borrow`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Pointer`]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Copy`]: marker/trait.Copy.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Clone`]: clone/trait.Clone.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Deref`]: ops/trait.Deref.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Borrow`]: borrow/trait.Borrow.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Pointer`]: fmt/trait.Pointer.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `&mut T` references get all of the above except `Copy` and `Clone` (to prevent creating</span> <span class="doccomment">/// multiple simultaneous mutable borrows), plus the following, regardless of the type of its</span> <span class="doccomment">/// referent:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`DerefMut`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`BorrowMut`]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`DerefMut`]: ops/trait.DerefMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`BorrowMut`]: borrow/trait.BorrowMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// The following traits are implemented on `&T` references if the underlying `T` also implements</span> <span class="doccomment">/// that trait:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * All the traits in [`std::fmt`] except [`Pointer`] and [`fmt::Write`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`PartialOrd`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Ord`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`PartialEq`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Eq`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`AsRef`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Fn`] \(in addition, `&T` references get [`FnMut`] and [`FnOnce`] if `T: Fn`)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Hash`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`ToSocketAddrs`]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`std::fmt`]: fmt/index.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`fmt::Write`]: fmt/trait.Write.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`PartialOrd`]: cmp/trait.PartialOrd.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Ord`]: cmp/trait.Ord.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`PartialEq`]: cmp/trait.PartialEq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Eq`]: cmp/trait.Eq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`AsRef`]: convert/trait.AsRef.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Fn`]: ops/trait.Fn.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`FnMut`]: ops/trait.FnMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`FnOnce`]: ops/trait.FnOnce.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Hash`]: hash/trait.Hash.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`ToSocketAddrs`]: net/trait.ToSocketAddrs.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `&mut T` references get all of the above except `ToSocketAddrs`, plus the following, if `T`</span> <span class="doccomment">/// implements that trait:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`AsMut`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`FnMut`] \(in addition, `&mut T` references get [`FnOnce`] if `T: FnMut`)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`fmt::Write`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Iterator`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`DoubleEndedIterator`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`ExactSizeIterator`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`FusedIterator`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`TrustedLen`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Send`] \(note that `&T` references only get `Send` if `T: Sync`)</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`io::Write`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Read`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Seek`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`BufRead`]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`AsMut`]: convert/trait.AsMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Iterator`]: iter/trait.Iterator.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`DoubleEndedIterator`]: iter/trait.DoubleEndedIterator.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`ExactSizeIterator`]: iter/trait.ExactSizeIterator.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`FusedIterator`]: iter/trait.FusedIterator.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`TrustedLen`]: iter/trait.TrustedLen.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Send`]: marker/trait.Send.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`io::Write`]: io/trait.Write.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Read`]: io/trait.Read.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Seek`]: io/trait.Seek.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`BufRead`]: io/trait.BufRead.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Note that due to method call deref coercion, simply calling a trait method will act like they</span> <span class="doccomment">/// work on references as well as they do on owned values! The implementations described here are</span> <span class="doccomment">/// meant for generic contexts, where the final type `T` is a type parameter or otherwise not</span> <span class="doccomment">/// locally known.</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_ref</span> { } <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">doc</span>(<span class="ident">primitive</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"fn"</span>)]</span> <span class="comment">//</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Function pointers, like `fn(usize) -> bool`.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// *See also the traits [`Fn`], [`FnMut`], and [`FnOnce`].*</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Fn`]: ops/trait.Fn.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`FnMut`]: ops/trait.FnMut.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`FnOnce`]: ops/trait.FnOnce.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Plain function pointers are obtained by casting either plain functions, or closures that don't</span> <span class="doccomment">/// capture an environment:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn add_one(x: usize) -> usize {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// x + 1</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let ptr: fn(usize) -> usize = add_one;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(ptr(5), 6);</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let clos: fn(usize) -> usize = |x| x + 5;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// assert_eq!(clos(5), 10);</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// In addition to varying based on their signature, function pointers come in two flavors: safe</span> <span class="doccomment">/// and unsafe. Plain `fn()` function pointers can only point to safe functions,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// while `unsafe fn()` function pointers can point to safe or unsafe functions.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn add_one(x: usize) -> usize {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// x + 1</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// unsafe fn add_one_unsafely(x: usize) -> usize {</span> <span class="doccomment">/// x + 1</span> <span class="doccomment">/// }</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let safe_ptr: fn(usize) -> usize = add_one;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// //ERROR: mismatched types: expected normal fn, found unsafe fn</span> <span class="doccomment">/// //let bad_ptr: fn(usize) -> usize = add_one_unsafely;</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let unsafe_ptr: unsafe fn(usize) -> usize = add_one_unsafely;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// let really_safe_ptr: unsafe fn(usize) -> usize = add_one;</span> <span class="doccomment">/// ```</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// On top of that, function pointers can vary based on what ABI they use. This is achieved by</span> <span class="doccomment">/// adding the `extern` keyword to the type name, followed by the ABI in question. For example,</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `fn()` is different from `extern "C" fn()`, which itself is different from `extern "stdcall"</span> <span class="doccomment">/// fn()`, and so on for the various ABIs that Rust supports. Non-`extern` functions have an ABI</span> <span class="doccomment">/// of `"Rust"`, and `extern` functions without an explicit ABI have an ABI of `"C"`. For more</span> <span class="doccomment">/// information, see [the nomicon's section on foreign calling conventions][nomicon-abi].</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [nomicon-abi]: ../nomicon/ffi.html#foreign-calling-conventions</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Extern function declarations with the "C" or "cdecl" ABIs can also be *variadic*, allowing them</span> <span class="doccomment">/// to be called with a variable number of arguments. Normal rust functions, even those with an</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `extern "ABI"`, cannot be variadic. For more information, see [the nomicon's section on</span> <span class="doccomment">/// variadic functions][nomicon-variadic].</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [nomicon-variadic]: ../nomicon/ffi.html#variadic-functions</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// These markers can be combined, so `unsafe extern "stdcall" fn()` is a valid type.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Like references in rust, function pointers are assumed to not be null, so if you want to pass a</span> <span class="doccomment">/// function pointer over FFI and be able to accommodate null pointers, make your type</span> <span class="doccomment">/// `Option<fn()>` with your required signature.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Function pointers implement the following traits:</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Clone`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`PartialEq`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Eq`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`PartialOrd`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Ord`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Hash`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Pointer`]</span> <span class="doccomment">/// * [`Debug`]</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Clone`]: clone/trait.Clone.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`PartialEq`]: cmp/trait.PartialEq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Eq`]: cmp/trait.Eq.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`PartialOrd`]: cmp/trait.PartialOrd.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Ord`]: cmp/trait.Ord.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Hash`]: hash/trait.Hash.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Pointer`]: fmt/trait.Pointer.html</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Debug`]: fmt/trait.Debug.html</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// Due to a temporary restriction in Rust's type system, these traits are only implemented on</span> <span class="doccomment">/// functions that take 12 arguments or less, with the `"Rust"` and `"C"` ABIs. In the future, this</span> <span class="doccomment">/// may change.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// In addition, function pointers of *any* signature, ABI, or safety are [`Copy`], and all *safe*</span> <span class="doccomment">/// function pointers implement [`Fn`], [`FnMut`], and [`FnOnce`]. This works because these traits</span> <span class="doccomment">/// are specially known to the compiler.</span> <span class="doccomment">///</span> <span class="doccomment">/// [`Copy`]: marker/trait.Copy.html</span> <span class="attribute">#[<span class="ident">stable</span>(<span class="ident">feature</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"rust1"</span>, <span class="ident">since</span> <span class="op">=</span> <span class="string">"1.0.0"</span>)]</span> <span class="kw">mod</span> <span class="ident">prim_fn</span> { } </pre> </section> <section id='search' class="content hidden"></section> <section class="footer"></section> <aside id="help" class="hidden"> <div> <h1 class="hidden">Help</h1> <div class="shortcuts"> <h2>Keyboard Shortcuts</h2> <dl> <dt><kbd>?</kbd></dt> <dd>Show this help dialog</dd> <dt><kbd>S</kbd></dt> <dd>Focus the search field</dd> <dt><kbd>↑</kbd></dt> <dd>Move up in search results</dd> <dt><kbd>↓</kbd></dt> <dd>Move down in search results</dd> <dt><kbd>↹</kbd></dt> <dd>Switch tab</dd> <dt><kbd>⏎</kbd></dt> <dd>Go to active search result</dd> <dt><kbd>+</kbd></dt> <dd>Expand all sections</dd> <dt><kbd>-</kbd></dt> <dd>Collapse all sections</dd> </dl> </div> <div class="infos"> <h2>Search Tricks</h2> <p> Prefix searches with a type followed by a colon (e.g. <code>fn:</code>) to restrict the search to a given type. </p> <p> Accepted types are: <code>fn</code>, <code>mod</code>, <code>struct</code>, <code>enum</code>, <code>trait</code>, <code>type</code>, <code>macro</code>, and <code>const</code>. </p> <p> Search functions by type signature (e.g. <code>vec -> usize</code> or <code>* -> vec</code>) </p> </div> </div> </aside> <script> window.rootPath = "../../"; window.currentCrate = "std"; </script> <script src="../../main.js"></script> <script defer src="../../search-index.js"></script> </body> </html>