This Rust tutorial explains the fold()
mechanism well, and this example code:
let sum = (1..4).fold(0, |sum, x| sum + x);
works as expected.
I'd like to run it on a vector, so based on that example, first I wrote this:
let sum: u32 = vec![1,2,3,4,5,6].iter().fold(0, |sum, val| sum += val);
which threw an error:
error: binary assignment operation `+=` cannot be applied to types `_` and `&u32` [E0368]
let sum = ratings.values().fold(0, |sum, val| sum += val);
^~~~~~~~~~
I guessed this might be a reference-related error for some reason, so I changed that to fold(0, |sum, &val| sum += val)
, which resulted in
error: mismatched types:
expected `u32`,
found `()`
Hm, maybe something's wrong with the closure? Using {sum += x; sum }
, I got
binary assignment operation `+=` cannot be applied to types `_` and `&u32`
again.
After further trial and error, adding mut
to sum
worked:
let sum = vec![1,2,3,4,5,6].iter().fold(0, |mut sum, &x| {sum += x; sum});
Could someone explain the reason why fold()
for vectors differs so much from the tutorial? Or is there a better way to handle this?
For reference, I'm using Rust beta, 2015-04-02.
Since Rust 1.11, you can sum
the iterator directly, skipping fold
:
let sum: u32 = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6].iter().sum();
You've already figured out that +=
is the problem, but I'd like to provide some more exposition.
In your case, the arguments provided to the fold
closure are _
and &u32
. The first type is an not-yet-specified integer. If you change your fold call to fold(0u32, |sum, val| sum += val)
, you'll get a slightly different message:
let sum: u32 = vec![1,2,3,4,5,6].iter().fold(0u32, |sum, val| sum += val);
error[E0308]: mismatched types
|
2 | let sum: u32 = vec![1,2,3,4,5,6].iter().fold(0u32, |sum, val| sum += val);
| ^^^ expected u32, found &{integer}
|
= note: expected type `u32`
= note: found type `&{integer}`
The result value of the binary assignment operation +=
is ()
, the unit type. This explains the error message when you changed to fold(0, |sum, &val| sum += val)
:
let mut a = 1;
let what_am_i = a += 1;
println!("{:?}", what_am_i); // => ()
If you change to fold(0, |sum, &val| {sum += val ; sum})
, you then get an understandable error about immutable variables:
let sum: u32 = vec![1,2,3,4,5,6].iter().fold(0, |sum, &val| {sum += val; sum});
error[E0384]: re-assignment of immutable variable `sum`
--> src/main.rs:2:66
|
2 | let sum: u32 = vec![1,2,3,4,5,6].iter().fold(0, |sum, &val| {sum += val; sum});
| --- ^^^^^^^^^^ re-assignment of immutable variable
| |
| first assignment to `sum`
From here, you could mark sum
as mutable, but the correct solution is to simply fold with sum + val
, as you discovered.
So it turned out there was a huge difference in my code, as I wrote
sum += x
instead of
sum + x
Well, at least I hope this question helps, in case someone gets into similar situation.
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