Option
We have already seen some use of Option<T>
. It stores either a value of type T
or nothing. For example, String::find
returns an Option<usize>
.
fn main() { let name = "Löwe èè LĂ©opard Gepardi"; let mut position: Option<usize> = name.find('Ă©'); println!("find returned {position:?}"); assert_eq!(position.unwrap(), 14); position = name.find('Z'); println!("find returned {position:?}"); assert_eq!(position.expect("Character not found"), 0); }
This slide should take about 10 minutes.
Option
is widely used, not just in the standard library.unwrap
will return the value in anOption
, or panic.expect
is similar but takes an error message.- You can panic on None, but you can't "accidentally" forget to check for None.
- It's common to
unwrap
/expect
all over the place when hacking something together, but production code typically handlesNone
in a nicer fashion.
- The niche optimization means that
Option<T>
often has the same size in memory asT
.