rustlings/exercises/smart_pointers/cow1.rs
2023-01-01 01:52:05 +01:00

48 lines
1.5 KiB
Rust

// cow1.rs
// This exercise explores the Cow, or Clone-On-Write type.
// Cow is a clone-on-write smart pointer.
// It can enclose and provide immutable access to borrowed data, and clone the data lazily when mutation or ownership is required.
// The type is designed to work with general borrowed data via the Borrow trait.
// I AM NOT DONE
use std::borrow::Cow;
fn abs_all<'a, 'b>(input: &'a mut Cow<'b, [i32]>) -> &'a mut Cow<'b, [i32]> {
for i in 0..input.len() {
let v = input[i];
if v < 0 {
// Clones into a vector if not already owned.
input.to_mut()[i] = -v;
}
}
input
}
fn main() {
// No clone occurs because `input` doesn't need to be mutated.
let slice = [0, 1, 2];
let mut input = Cow::from(&slice[..]);
match abs_all(&mut input) {
Cow::Borrowed(_) => println!("I borrowed the slice!"),
_ => panic!("expected borrowed value"),
}
// Clone occurs because `input` needs to be mutated.
let slice = [-1, 0, 1];
let mut input = Cow::from(&slice[..]);
match abs_all(&mut input) {
Cow::Owned(_) => println!("I modified the slice and now own it!"),
_ => panic!("expected owned value"),
}
// No clone occurs because `input` is already owned.
let slice = vec![-1, 0, 1];
let mut input = Cow::from(slice);
match abs_all(&mut input) {
// TODO
Cow::Borrowed(_) => println!("I own this slice!"),
_ => panic!("expected borrowed value"),
}
}