Utilities for working with uninitialized arrays
- No dependencies
#[no_std]- No panics (all APIs return
ResultorOption)
This crate provides a few sets of APIs:
These are a pair of functions which are generally used as follows:
- stack-allocate an uninitialized array with
uninit_buf - initialize each element
- unsafely convert it to an initialized array with
mark_initialized
For example:
use unarray::*;
fn main() {
let mut buffer = uninit_buf::<i32; 10>();
for slot in &mut buffer {
slot.write(123);
}
let array = unsafe { mark_initialized(buffer) };
assert_eq!(array, [123; 10]);
}This is simple to understand, but still requires unsafe, which is hard to justify in many cases
Functions to build arrays from a length and a function that maps from index -> value:
let even_numbers = build_array(|i| i * 2); // const generic length parameter inferred
assert_eq!(even_numbers, [0, 2, 4]);
let numbers = build_array_option::<usize, 3>(|i| 3.checked_sub(i));
assert_eq!(numbers, Some([3, 2, 1]));
let numbers = build_array_option::<usize, 5>(|i| 3.checked_sub(i));
assert_eq!(numbers, None); // since a single element failed, the whole operation failedThere is also an equivalent build_array_result for Result-returning functions
It's fairly common to want to collect an iterator into an array, but this is currently tricky in
stable Rust, since iterators don't carry compile-time information about their length. Because of this,
arrays don't implement FromIterator, which is required for .collect() to work.
Instead, this library provides ArrayFromIter, which does implement FromIterator. This struct can
be destructured to get an Option<[T, N]>. If the iterator contained exactly N elements, this is Some(array), otherwise, it is None:
let iter = [1, 2, 3].into_iter();
match iter.collect() {
ArrayFromIter(Some([a, b, c])) => println!("exactly 3 elements: {a}, {b}, {c}"),
ArrayFromIter(None) => println!("not 3 elements"),
}// mapping an array via a `Result`
let strings = ["123", "234"];
let numbers = strings.map_result(|s| s.parse());
assert_eq!(numbers, Ok([123, 234]));
let bad_strings = ["123", "uh oh"];
let result = bad_strings.map_result(|s| s.parse::<i32>());
assert!(result.is_err()); // since one of the element fails, the whole operation failsThere is also map_option for functions which return an Option
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.