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How do you make a range in Rust?

The documentation doesn't say how and the tutorial completely ignores for loops.

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mcandre Avatar asked Feb 14 '12 05:02

mcandre


2 Answers

As of 1.0, for loops work with values of types with the Iterator trait.

The book describes this technique in chapter 3.5 and chapter 13.2.

If you are interested in how for loops operate, see the described syntactic sugar in Module std::iter.

Example:

fn main() {     let strs = ["red", "green", "blue"];      for sptr in strs.iter() {         println!("{}", sptr);     } } 

(Playground)

If you just want to iterate over a range of numbers, as in C's for loops, you can create a numeric range with the a..b syntax:

for i in 0..3 {     println!("{}", i); } 

If you need both, the index and the element from an array, the idiomatic way to get that is with the Iterator::enumerate method:

fn main() {     let strs = ["red", "green", "blue"];      for (i, s) in strs.iter().enumerate() {         println!("String #{} is {}", i, s);     } } 

Notes:

  • The loop items are borrowed references to the iteratee elements. In this case, the elements of strs have type &'static str - they are borrowed pointers to static strings. This means sptr has type &&'static str, so we dereference it as *sptr. An alternative form which I prefer is:

      for &s in strs.iter() {       println!("{}", s);   } 
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nejucomo Avatar answered Nov 09 '22 00:11

nejucomo


Actually, the Loops section of the tutorial does cover for loops:

When iterating over a vector, use for instead.

for elt in ["red", "green", "blue"] {    std::io::println(elt); } 

But if you needed indices, you could do something like the following, using the uint::range function from the core library (or int::range or u8::range or u32::range or u64::range) and Rust's syntax for blocks:

range(0u, 64u, {|i| C[i] = A[i] + B[i]}); 

Rust used to support this equivalent syntax but it was later removed:

range(0u, 64u) {|i|     C[i] = A[i] + B[i]; } 
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Lindsey Kuper Avatar answered Nov 09 '22 00:11

Lindsey Kuper