I have a data structure like this:
struct R {
hmhs: HashMap<i64, HashSet<i64>>,
}
impl R {
fn hs_for_hmhs(&mut self) -> &mut HashSet<i64> {
if let None = self.hmhs.get(&0) {
self.hmhs.insert(0, HashSet::new());
}
self.hmhs.get_mut(&0).unwrap()
}
...
@PeterHall yes, in case orlp decides to choose this name, just everyone make sure not to click on any of the prominent search results or to switch to image search when googling "BDSM Rust" ;)
The thing is, I stumbled upon a situation where you'd like to give an idea of how a function works by providing an example and an expected value. This expected value has a messy fractional part, so a strict equality can be just wrong (in case of precision errors).
Ah, surely. So, just to confirm: any structure that has boxes inside, once moved, only copies the header (the constructor and fields of the enum); the boxed data itself isn't moved at all since it is just a pointer, and the enum owns the area it points to. Correct? — MaiaVictor24 mins ago
if let x = y is a move, even though it doesn't do anything but re-label some bits behind the scenes, then saying "the boxed data isn't moved" is incorrect because moving a box is also a move
Consider the snippet
struct Foo {
dummy: [u8; 65536],
}
fn bar(foo: Foo) {
println!("{:p}", &foo)
}
fn main() {
let o = Foo { dummy: [42u8; 65536] };
println!("{:p}", &o);
bar(o);
}
A typical result of the program is
0x7fffc1239890
0x7fffc1229890
where the addresses ar...
They did, yes, but that information was in a comment that they have now deleted. Their original question was ambiguous and thus why I would have said the answer was not as correct as it could be
> Can I move a value to inside a struct without copying?
The answer to that, currently, is no
(slightly more expanded: you cannot guarantee that there will be no moves, the optimizer might remove all of them anyway)
To be blunt, this is a terrible suggestion. If the replace_all call never needs to be run (and thus never needs to return Cow::Owned), then it shouldn't be there. Presumably OP actually does need to remove comments for some reason, thus this will always panic. It's also not "dangerous" at all. — Shepmaster2 hours ago
^ This made me curious about whether replace_all can return a substring when it replaces all the way to the end of line.
(It doesn't.)
I guess it would probably be a pessimization in most cases
@Shepmaster Yeah, I'd normally leave in stylistic things that OP does, which I don't care about, but he didn't format properly at all, so my view is that he either didn't care or didn't know how to do it.