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How to write a loop in Rust with a decreasing range including the 0? [duplicate]

Tags:

for-loop

rust

Editor's note: This question was asked before Rust 1.0 was released and the .. "range" operator was introduced. The question's code no longer represents the current style, but some answers below uses code that will work in Rust 1.0 and onwards.

I was playing on the Rust by Example website and wanted to print out fizzbuzz in reverse. Here is what I tried:

fn main() {
    // `n` will take the values: 1, 2, ..., 100 in each iteration
    for n in std::iter::range_step(100u, 0, -1) {
        if n % 15 == 0 {
            println!("fizzbuzz");
        } else if n % 3 == 0 {
            println!("fizz");
        } else if n % 5 == 0 {
            println!("buzz");
        } else {
            println!("{}", n);
        }
    }
}

There were no compilation errors, but it did not print out anything. How do I iterate from 100 to 1?

like image 813
Tybalt Avatar asked Aug 06 '14 21:08

Tybalt


2 Answers

A forward loop is like this:

for x in 0..100 {
    println!("{}", x);
}

And a reverse loop is done by calling Iterator::rev to reverse the order:

for x in (0..100).rev() {
    println!("{}", x);
}
like image 84
Luxspes Avatar answered Oct 14 '22 05:10

Luxspes


Editor's note: This question refers to parts of Rust that predate Rust 1.0. Look at other answers for up to date code.

Your code doesn't work because a uint of value -1 is equal the maximum value of uint. The range_step iterator stops immediately upon detecting overflow. Using an int fixes this.

std::iter::range_step(100i, 0, -1)

You can also reverse an iterator with rev().

for n in range(0u, 100).rev() { ... }

Though note that this will be from 99->0, rather than 100->1.

like image 33
A.B. Avatar answered Oct 14 '22 06:10

A.B.