Enum solana_program::program_option::COption [−][src]
#[repr(C)] pub enum COption<T> { None, Some(T), }
Expand description
A C representation of Rust’s std::option::Option
Variants
No value
Some value T
Implementations
Returns true
if the option is a COption::Some
value.
Examples
let x: COption<u32> = COption::Some(2); assert_eq!(x.is_some(), true); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.is_some(), false);
Returns true
if the option is a COption::None
value.
Examples
let x: COption<u32> = COption::Some(2); assert_eq!(x.is_none(), false); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.is_none(), true);
Returns true
if the option is a COption::Some
value containing the given value.
Examples
#![feature(option_result_contains)] let x: COption<u32> = COption::Some(2); assert_eq!(x.contains(&2), true); let x: COption<u32> = COption::Some(3); assert_eq!(x.contains(&2), false); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.contains(&2), false);
Converts from &COption<T>
to COption<&T>
.
Examples
Converts an COption<
String
>
into an COption<
usize
>
, preserving the original.
The map
method takes the self
argument by value, consuming the original,
so this technique uses as_ref
to first take an COption
to a reference
to the value inside the original.
let text: COption<String> = COption::Some("Hello, world!".to_string()); // First, cast `COption<String>` to `COption<&String>` with `as_ref`, // then consume *that* with `map`, leaving `text` on the stack. let text_length: COption<usize> = text.as_ref().map(|s| s.len()); println!("still can print text: {:?}", text);
Converts from &mut COption<T>
to COption<&mut T>
.
Examples
let mut x = COption::Some(2); match x.as_mut() { COption::Some(v) => *v = 42, COption::None => {}, } assert_eq!(x, COption::Some(42));
Unwraps an option, yielding the content of a COption::Some
.
Panics
Panics if the value is a COption::None
with a custom panic message provided by
msg
.
Examples
let x = COption::Some("value"); assert_eq!(x.expect("the world is ending"), "value");
let x: COption<&str> = COption::None;
x.expect("the world is ending"); // panics with `the world is ending`
Moves the value v
out of the COption<T>
if it is COption::Some(v)
.
In general, because this function may panic, its use is discouraged.
Instead, prefer to use pattern matching and handle the COption::None
case explicitly.
Panics
Panics if the self value equals COption::None
.
Examples
let x = COption::Some("air"); assert_eq!(x.unwrap(), "air");
let x: COption<&str> = COption::None;
assert_eq!(x.unwrap(), "air"); // fails
Returns the contained value or a default.
Arguments passed to unwrap_or
are eagerly evaluated; if you are passing
the result of a function call, it is recommended to use unwrap_or_else
,
which is lazily evaluated.
Examples
assert_eq!(COption::Some("car").unwrap_or("bike"), "car"); assert_eq!(COption::None.unwrap_or("bike"), "bike");
Returns the contained value or computes it from a closure.
Examples
let k = 10; assert_eq!(COption::Some(4).unwrap_or_else(|| 2 * k), 4); assert_eq!(COption::None.unwrap_or_else(|| 2 * k), 20);
Maps an COption<T>
to COption<U>
by applying a function to a contained value.
Examples
Converts an COption<
String
>
into an COption<
usize
>
, consuming the original:
let maybe_some_string = COption::Some(String::from("Hello, World!")); // `COption::map` takes self *by value*, consuming `maybe_some_string` let maybe_some_len = maybe_some_string.map(|s| s.len()); assert_eq!(maybe_some_len, COption::Some(13));
Applies a function to the contained value (if any), or returns the provided default (if not).
Examples
let x = COption::Some("foo"); assert_eq!(x.map_or(42, |v| v.len()), 3); let x: COption<&str> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.map_or(42, |v| v.len()), 42);
Applies a function to the contained value (if any), or computes a default (if not).
Examples
let k = 21; let x = COption::Some("foo"); assert_eq!(x.map_or_else(|| 2 * k, |v| v.len()), 3); let x: COption<&str> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.map_or_else(|| 2 * k, |v| v.len()), 42);
Transforms the COption<T>
into a Result<T, E>
, mapping COption::Some(v)
to
Ok(v)
and COption::None
to Err(err)
.
Arguments passed to ok_or
are eagerly evaluated; if you are passing the
result of a function call, it is recommended to use ok_or_else
, which is
lazily evaluated.
Examples
let x = COption::Some("foo"); assert_eq!(x.ok_or(0), Ok("foo")); let x: COption<&str> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.ok_or(0), Err(0));
Transforms the COption<T>
into a Result<T, E>
, mapping COption::Some(v)
to
Ok(v)
and COption::None
to Err(err())
.
Examples
let x = COption::Some("foo"); assert_eq!(x.ok_or_else(|| 0), Ok("foo")); let x: COption<&str> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.ok_or_else(|| 0), Err(0));
Returns COption::None
if the option is COption::None
, otherwise returns optb
.
Examples
let x = COption::Some(2); let y: COption<&str> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.and(y), COption::None); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; let y = COption::Some("foo"); assert_eq!(x.and(y), COption::None); let x = COption::Some(2); let y = COption::Some("foo"); assert_eq!(x.and(y), COption::Some("foo")); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; let y: COption<&str> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.and(y), COption::None);
Returns COption::None
if the option is COption::None
, otherwise calls f
with the
wrapped value and returns the result.
COption::Some languages call this operation flatmap.
Examples
fn sq(x: u32) -> COption<u32> { COption::Some(x * x) } fn nope(_: u32) -> COption<u32> { COption::None } assert_eq!(COption::Some(2).and_then(sq).and_then(sq), COption::Some(16)); assert_eq!(COption::Some(2).and_then(sq).and_then(nope), COption::None); assert_eq!(COption::Some(2).and_then(nope).and_then(sq), COption::None); assert_eq!(COption::None.and_then(sq).and_then(sq), COption::None);
Returns COption::None
if the option is COption::None
, otherwise calls predicate
with the wrapped value and returns:
COption::Some(t)
ifpredicate
returnstrue
(wheret
is the wrapped value), andCOption::None
ifpredicate
returnsfalse
.
This function works similar to Iterator::filter()
. You can imagine
the COption<T>
being an iterator over one or zero elements. filter()
lets you decide which elements to keep.
Examples
fn is_even(n: &i32) -> bool { n % 2 == 0 } assert_eq!(COption::None.filter(is_even), COption::None); assert_eq!(COption::Some(3).filter(is_even), COption::None); assert_eq!(COption::Some(4).filter(is_even), COption::Some(4));
Returns the option if it contains a value, otherwise returns optb
.
Arguments passed to or
are eagerly evaluated; if you are passing the
result of a function call, it is recommended to use or_else
, which is
lazily evaluated.
Examples
let x = COption::Some(2); let y = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.or(y), COption::Some(2)); let x = COption::None; let y = COption::Some(100); assert_eq!(x.or(y), COption::Some(100)); let x = COption::Some(2); let y = COption::Some(100); assert_eq!(x.or(y), COption::Some(2)); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; let y = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.or(y), COption::None);
Returns the option if it contains a value, otherwise calls f
and
returns the result.
Examples
fn nobody() -> COption<&'static str> { COption::None } fn vikings() -> COption<&'static str> { COption::Some("vikings") } assert_eq!(COption::Some("barbarians").or_else(vikings), COption::Some("barbarians")); assert_eq!(COption::None.or_else(vikings), COption::Some("vikings")); assert_eq!(COption::None.or_else(nobody), COption::None);
Returns COption::Some
if exactly one of self
, optb
is COption::Some
, otherwise returns COption::None
.
Examples
let x = COption::Some(2); let y: COption<u32> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.xor(y), COption::Some(2)); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; let y = COption::Some(2); assert_eq!(x.xor(y), COption::Some(2)); let x = COption::Some(2); let y = COption::Some(2); assert_eq!(x.xor(y), COption::None); let x: COption<u32> = COption::None; let y: COption<u32> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.xor(y), COption::None);
Inserts v
into the option if it is COption::None
, then
returns a mutable reference to the contained value.
Examples
let mut x = COption::None; { let y: &mut u32 = x.get_or_insert(5); assert_eq!(y, &5); *y = 7; } assert_eq!(x, COption::Some(7));
Inserts a value computed from f
into the option if it is COption::None
, then
returns a mutable reference to the contained value.
Examples
let mut x = COption::None; { let y: &mut u32 = x.get_or_insert_with(|| 5); assert_eq!(y, &5); *y = 7; } assert_eq!(x, COption::Some(7));
Replaces the actual value in the option by the value given in parameter,
returning the old value if present,
leaving a COption::Some
in its place without deinitializing either one.
Examples
let mut x = COption::Some(2); let old = x.replace(5); assert_eq!(x, COption::Some(5)); assert_eq!(old, COption::Some(2)); let mut x = COption::None; let old = x.replace(3); assert_eq!(x, COption::Some(3)); assert_eq!(old, COption::None);
Returns the contained value or a default
Consumes the self
argument then, if COption::Some
, returns the contained
value, otherwise if COption::None
, returns the default value for that
type.
Examples
Converts a string to an integer, turning poorly-formed strings
into 0 (the default value for integers). parse
converts
a string to any other type that implements FromStr
, returning
COption::None
on error.
let good_year_from_input = "1909"; let bad_year_from_input = "190blarg"; let good_year = good_year_from_input.parse().ok().unwrap_or_default(); let bad_year = bad_year_from_input.parse().ok().unwrap_or_default(); assert_eq!(1909, good_year); assert_eq!(0, bad_year);
Converts from COption<T>
(or &COption<T>
) to COption<&T::Target>
.
Leaves the original COption in-place, creating a new one with a reference
to the original one, additionally coercing the contents via Deref
.
Examples
#![feature(inner_deref)] let x: COption<String> = COption::Some("hey".to_owned()); assert_eq!(x.as_deref(), COption::Some("hey")); let x: COption<String> = COption::None; assert_eq!(x.as_deref(), COption::None);
Converts from COption<T>
(or &mut COption<T>
) to COption<&mut T::Target>
.
Leaves the original COption
in-place, creating a new one containing a mutable reference to
the inner type’s Deref::Target
type.
Examples
#![feature(inner_deref)] let mut x: COption<String> = COption::Some("hey".to_owned()); assert_eq!(x.as_deref_mut().map(|x| { x.make_ascii_uppercase(); x }), COption::Some("HEY".to_owned().as_mut_str()));
Transposes an COption
of a Result
into a Result
of an COption
.
COption::None
will be mapped to Ok
(
COption::None
)
.
COption::Some
(
Ok
(_))
and COption::Some
(
Err
(_))
will be mapped to
Ok
(
COption::Some
(_))
and Err
(_)
.
Examples
#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq)] struct COption::SomeErr; let x: Result<COption<i32>, COption::SomeErr> = Ok(COption::Some(5)); let y: COption<Result<i32, COption::SomeErr>> = COption::Some(Ok(5)); assert_eq!(x, y.transpose());
Converts from COption<COption<T>>
to COption<T>
Examples
Basic usage:
#![feature(option_flattening)] let x: COption<COption<u32>> = COption::Some(COption::Some(6)); assert_eq!(COption::Some(6), x.flatten()); let x: COption<COption<u32>> = COption::Some(COption::None); assert_eq!(COption::None, x.flatten()); let x: COption<COption<u32>> = COption::None; assert_eq!(COption::None, x.flatten());
Flattening once only removes one level of nesting:
#![feature(option_flattening)] let x: COption<COption<COption<u32>>> = COption::Some(COption::Some(COption::Some(6))); assert_eq!(COption::Some(COption::Some(6)), x.flatten()); assert_eq!(COption::Some(6), x.flatten().flatten());
Trait Implementations
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
Auto Trait Implementations
impl<T> RefUnwindSafe for COption<T> where
T: RefUnwindSafe,
impl<T> UnwindSafe for COption<T> where
T: UnwindSafe,
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more