I have seen Vec<_>
a couple of times already. For example:
let a = "line1\r\nline2\nline3"; println!("{:?}", a.lines().collect::<Vec<_>>());
But what does that 'uncertain face' <_>
mean?
I'm used to a typename in angle brackets, but what type can that be? The only meaning of underscore that I'm aware of is from Python as a name for an unused variable.
The underscore ( _ ) is a reserved identifier in Rust and serves different purposes depending on the context. It usually means that something is ignored.
Vector is a module in Rust that provides the container space to store values. It is a contiguous resizable array type, with heap-allocated contents. It is denoted by Vec<T>. Vectors in Rust have O(1) indexing and push and pop operations in vector also take O(1) complexity.
It means "Rust compiler, infer what type goes into the Vec ". And it is indeed analogous to the unused variable in Python (and in Rust itself), in that it represents a placeholder for a type, like it can represent a placeholder for a variable name.
It means "Rust compiler, infer what type goes into the Vec
". And it is indeed analogous to the unused variable in Python (and in Rust itself), in that it represents a placeholder for a type, like it can represent a placeholder for a variable name.
You can find an explanation in The Rust Programming Language chapter about iterator consumers:
Using a _ will let you provide a partial hint:
let one_to_one_hundred = (1..101).collect::<Vec<_>>();
This says "Collect into aVec<T>
, please, but infer what theT
is for me."_
is sometimes called a "type placeholder" for this reason.
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