Trait core::iter::FromIterator
[−]
[src]
pub trait FromIterator<A>: Sized { fn from_iter<T: IntoIterator<Item=A>>(iterator: T) -> Self; }
Conversion from an Iterator
.
By implementing FromIterator
for a type, you define how it will be
created from an iterator. This is common for types which describe a
collection of some kind.
FromIterator
's from_iter()
is rarely called explicitly, and is instead
used through Iterator
's collect()
method. See collect()
's
documentation for more examples.
See also: IntoIterator
.
Examples
Basic usage:
fn main() { use std::iter::FromIterator; let five_fives = std::iter::repeat(5).take(5); let v = Vec::from_iter(five_fives); assert_eq!(v, vec![5, 5, 5, 5, 5]); }use std::iter::FromIterator; let five_fives = std::iter::repeat(5).take(5); let v = Vec::from_iter(five_fives); assert_eq!(v, vec![5, 5, 5, 5, 5]);
Using collect()
to implicitly use FromIterator
:
let five_fives = std::iter::repeat(5).take(5); let v: Vec<i32> = five_fives.collect(); assert_eq!(v, vec![5, 5, 5, 5, 5]);
Implementing FromIterator
for your type:
use std::iter::FromIterator; // A sample collection, that's just a wrapper over Vec<T> #[derive(Debug)] struct MyCollection(Vec<i32>); // Let's give it some methods so we can create one and add things // to it. impl MyCollection { fn new() -> MyCollection { MyCollection(Vec::new()) } fn add(&mut self, elem: i32) { self.0.push(elem); } } // and we'll implement FromIterator impl FromIterator<i32> for MyCollection { fn from_iter<I: IntoIterator<Item=i32>>(iterator: I) -> Self { let mut c = MyCollection::new(); for i in iterator { c.add(i); } c } } // Now we can make a new iterator... let iter = (0..5).into_iter(); // ... and make a MyCollection out of it let c = MyCollection::from_iter(iter); assert_eq!(c.0, vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4]); // collect works too! let iter = (0..5).into_iter(); let c: MyCollection = iter.collect(); assert_eq!(c.0, vec![0, 1, 2, 3, 4]);
Required Methods
fn from_iter<T: IntoIterator<Item=A>>(iterator: T) -> Self
Creates a value from an iterator.
See the module-level documentation for more.
Examples
Basic usage:
fn main() { use std::iter::FromIterator; let five_fives = std::iter::repeat(5).take(5); let v = Vec::from_iter(five_fives); assert_eq!(v, vec![5, 5, 5, 5, 5]); }use std::iter::FromIterator; let five_fives = std::iter::repeat(5).take(5); let v = Vec::from_iter(five_fives); assert_eq!(v, vec![5, 5, 5, 5, 5]);
Implementors
impl<A, V: FromIterator<A>> FromIterator<Option<A>> for Option<V>
impl<A, E, V: FromIterator<A>> FromIterator<Result<A, E>> for Result<V, E>