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all exercises readme files now have a unified structure and a description
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21 lines
No EOL
1.5 KiB
Markdown
# Type conversions
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Rust offers a multitude of ways to convert a value of a given type into another type.
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The simplest form of type conversion is a type cast expression. It is denoted with the binary operator `as`. For instance, `println!("{}", 1 + 1.0);` would not compile, since `1` is an integer while `1.0` is a float. However, `println!("{}", 1 as f32 + 1.0)` should compile. The exercise [`using_as`](using_as.rs) tries to cover this.
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Rust also offers traits that facilitate type conversions upon implementation. These traits can be found under the [`convert`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/index.html) module.
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The traits are the following:
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- `From` and `Into` covered in [`from_into`](from_into.rs)
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- `TryFrom` and `TryInto` covered in [`try_from_into`](try_from_into.rs)
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- `AsRef` and `AsMut` covered in [`as_ref_mut`](as_ref_mut.rs)
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Furthermore, the `std::str` module offers a trait called [`FromStr`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/str/trait.FromStr.html) which helps with converting strings into target types via the `parse` method on strings. If properly implemented for a given type `Person`, then `let p: Person = "Mark,20".parse().unwrap()` should both compile and run without panicking.
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These should be the main ways ***within the standard library*** to convert data into your desired types.
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## Further information
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These are not directly covered in the book, but the standard library has a great documentation for it.
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- [conversions](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/index.html)
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- [`FromStr` trait](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/str/trait.FromStr.html) |