Option
& unwrap
In the last example, we showed that we can induce program failure at will.
We told our program to panic
if the royal received an inappropriate
gift - a snake. But what if the royal expected a gift and didn't receive
one? That case would be just as bad, so it needs to be handled!
We could test this against the null string (""
) as we do with a snake.
Since we're using Rust, let's instead have the compiler point out cases
where there's no gift.
An enum
called Option<T>
in the std
library is used when absence is a
possibility. It manifests itself as one of two "options":
Some(T)
: An element of typeT
was foundNone
: No element was found
These cases can either be explicitly handled via match
or implicitly with
unwrap
. Implicit handling will either return the inner element or panic
.
Note that it's possible to manually customize panic
with expect,
but unwrap
otherwise leaves us with a less meaningful output than explicit
handling. In the following example, explicit handling yields a more
controlled result while retaining the option to panic
if desired.
// The commoner has seen it all, and can handle any gift well. // All gifts are handled explicitly using `match`. fn give_commoner(gift: Option<&str>) { // Specify a course of action for each case. match gift { Some("snake") => println!("Yuck! I'm putting this snake back in the forest."), Some(inner) => println!("{}? How nice.", inner), None => println!("No gift? Oh well."), } } // Our sheltered royal will `panic` at the sight of snakes. // All gifts are handled implicitly using `unwrap`. fn give_royal(gift: Option<&str>) { // `unwrap` returns a `panic` when it receives a `None`. let inside = gift.unwrap(); if inside == "snake" { panic!("AAAaaaaa!!!!"); } println!("I love {}s!!!!!", inside); } fn main() { let food = Some("cabbage"); let snake = Some("snake"); let void = None; give_commoner(food); give_commoner(snake); give_commoner(void); let bird = Some("robin"); let nothing = None; give_royal(bird); give_royal(nothing); }