Book Image

Learning Rust

By : Vesa Kaihlavirta
Book Image

Learning Rust

By: Vesa Kaihlavirta

Overview of this book

Rust is a highly concurrent and high performance language that focuses on safety and speed, memory management, and writing clean code. It also guarantees thread safety, and its aim is to improve the performance of existing applications. Its potential is shown by the fact that it has been backed by Mozilla to solve the critical problem of concurrency. Learning Rust will teach you to build concurrent, fast, and robust applications. From learning the basic syntax to writing complex functions, this book will is your one stop guide to get up to speed with the fundamentals of Rust programming. We will cover the essentials of the language, including variables, procedures, output, compiling, installing, and memory handling. You will learn how to write object-oriented code, work with generics, conduct pattern matching, and build macros. You will get to know how to communicate with users and other services, as well as getting to grips with generics, scoping, and more advanced conditions. You will also discover how to extend the compilation unit in Rust. By the end of this book, you will be able to create a complex application in Rust to move forward with.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Title Page
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Introducing and Installing Rust
4
Conditions, Recursion, and Loops

Patterns and matching


Rust, as we have seen, contains many very powerful facilities. We will now consider two that are often seen, and then double back to examine how we can use the if let construct.

Matching

Let's look at a very unpleasant code block and then examine what it means:

fn my_test(x: i32) -> String 
{ 
    if x == 1 
    {   
        return "one".to_owned(); 
    } 
    else if x == 2 
    { 
        return "two".to_owned(); 
    } 
    else if x == 3 
    { 
        return "three".to_owned(); 
    } 
    return "not found".to_owned(); 
} 

The code takes an i32 parameter and tests to see what it equals. If the condition is met, some text is returned for that number; otherwise, "not found" is returned.

This is a trivial example, but imagine if you're testing against 10 different conditions; the if-else construct will become ugly.

If we were in C, we could use switch/case and Rust can also do something similar, but the keyword is match instead. If we used the match expression, our...