Hi guys, I have trouble understanding pattern matching when it comes to references. I have an Iter<(&str, &str)> and want to find the first element where the first &str equals some needle. .find()'s predicate takes &(&str, &str) so I can do |&pair| needle == pair.0. Now I am wondering why |&(x, _)| needle == x doesn't work. It says "can't compare str with &str". My IDE says x has type &&str but I don't understand why and I don't know how to fix it.
@purefanatic Since x in (x, _) is behind a reference to the tuple, the x itself inherits that indirection, so it becomes a &&str. The pattern &(x, _) does not automatically deref this extra reference.
@E_net4theprolificdownvoter Thanks, this works. I'm afraid I still don't quite understand what is going on. For example, why are |(x, _)| and |&(x, _)| equivalent here? Why doesn't |(&x, _)| needle == extension work? I wasn't able to find relevant documentation, so if you know any please share and I'll stop asking stupid questions ;-)
Thanks again. Yeah I also thought about auto-dereferencing, but couldn't quite put my finger on it. Regarding those match ergonomics I must say I wouldn't mind adding some & and * from time to time for more explicitness... At least for me as a newbie all this magic is very confusing
I don't get that they noticed the numerous panics in 2017 and just didn't do what I did...
BTW most of the my work in the first 3 days in my new startups was on finding solutions to remove about 200 unwrap. This was more fun and interesting that it looks :)