Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

Why does an if without an else always result in () as the value?

Tags:

rust

From this tutorial:

An if without an else always results in () as the value.

Why does Rust impose this restriction and doesn't let an if without an else return other values, like this:

let y = if x == 5 { 10 };
like image 686
Nan Xiao Avatar asked Apr 11 '17 01:04

Nan Xiao


1 Answers

For your example, the right question is: “What would the value of y be if x is not 5?”. What would happen here?

let x = 3;
let y = if x == 5 { 10 };
println!("{}", y);  // what?!

You could think that the if-without-else-expression could return an Option<_>, but...

  1. this would mean that the core language depends on yet another library item (those are then called lang items) which everyone tries to avoid
  2. you don't run into this situation too often
  3. you can get the same behavior by adding only a little bit of code (Some() & else { None })

In Rust, nearly everything is an expression (with the exception of let-bindings and expressions ending with a semicolon, so called expression statements). And there are a few examples of expressions always returning (), because nothing else makes sense. These include (compound-)assignments (why?), loops and if-without-else.

like image 134
Lukas Kalbertodt Avatar answered Sep 22 '22 23:09

Lukas Kalbertodt