I want to create an array of 10 empty vectors in Rust, but [Vec::new(); 10]
doesn't work as Vec
doesn't implement Copy
. How can I do this, and in more general terms how can I initialize a array by repeatedly calling a function?
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问题:
回答1:
I see two possible approaches
First
A simple solution using macro
macro_rules! array {
($v: expr; 1) => ([$v]);
($v: expr; 2) => ([$v, $v]);
($v: expr; 3) => ([$v, $v, $v]);
($v: expr; 4) => ([$v, $v, $v, $v]);
($v: expr; 5) => ([$v, $v, $v, $v, $v]);
// until 32
}
let a = array![Vec::new(); 3];
It's a bit verbose, but even the standard library uses this kind of construct.
Second
After realizing a connection between this question and another that I had answered before, I wrote this solution using nodrop
extern crate nodrop;
macro_rules! array {
($e: expr; $n:expr) => (
{
use std::mem;
use std::ptr;
use nodrop::NoDrop;
struct ArrayBuilder<T> {
len: usize,
data: *mut T,
}
impl<T> Drop for ArrayBuilder<T> {
fn drop(&mut self) {
unsafe {
while self.len > 0 {
let offset = (self.len as isize) - 1;
self.len -= 1;
ptr::drop_in_place(self.data.offset(offset));
}
}
}
}
let mut v: NoDrop<[_; $n]> = NoDrop::new(unsafe {
mem::uninitialized()
});
// helps type inference for v
if false { v[0] = $e; }
let mut builder = ArrayBuilder {
len: 0,
data: (&mut *v as *mut _) as *mut _
};
unsafe {
for i in 0..$n {
ptr::write(builder.data.offset(i as isize), $e);
builder.len = i + 1;
}
}
builder.len = 0;
v.into_inner()
}
)
}
let a = array![Vec::new(); 3];
And a test that indicates that it does not leak memory
#[test]
fn test() {
static mut COUNT: usize = 0;
#[derive(Debug)]
struct X(usize);
impl Drop for X {
fn drop(&mut self) {
println!("drop {:?}", self.0);
}
}
impl X {
fn new() -> X {
unsafe {
if COUNT == 3 {
panic!();
}
let x = X(COUNT);
COUNT += 1;
x
}
}
}
array![X::new(); 6];
}
In this test, the method X::new
panics when creating X(3)
, so X(0)
, X(1)
, X(2)
must be dropped.
Others
There is an unsafe solution here.
回答2:
For your specific case, you can just use Default
:
let v: [Vec<String>; 10] = Default::default();
For the general case, you can create an iterator out of your function and then collect into the array using ArrayVec
:
extern crate arrayvec;
use arrayvec::ArrayVec;
use std::iter;
fn make<F, R>(mut f: F) -> [R; 10]
where
F: FnMut() -> R,
{
let a: ArrayVec<_> = iter::repeat(()).map(|_| f()).collect();
a.into_inner().unwrap_or_else(|_| panic!("Did not have enough elements"))
}
fn main() {
let mut a = 0;
let arr = make(|| {
a += 3;
a
});
println!("{:?}", arr);
// [3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30]
}