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author | bors[bot] <26634292+bors[bot]@users.noreply.github.com> | 2020-09-29 14:00:36 +0100 |
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committer | GitHub <[email protected]> | 2020-09-29 14:00:36 +0100 |
commit | e315fd9bb0e0647ab8b0e118d264d2103e271586 (patch) | |
tree | 8fcb1279955a74327980700587e718335117979a /docs/dev | |
parent | bdc1f76cbda7478f39c190cc6ba296bc0030928f (diff) | |
parent | b069c1c69a6a3bc3ea3becbec5cc2fd76a5792cd (diff) |
Merge #6090
6090: More style advice r=matklad a=matklad
bors r+\n🤖
Co-authored-by: Aleksey Kladov <[email protected]>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/dev')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/dev/style.md | 52 |
1 files changed, 52 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/dev/style.md b/docs/dev/style.md index 397e85b35..bcd86fd3f 100644 --- a/docs/dev/style.md +++ b/docs/dev/style.md | |||
@@ -197,6 +197,43 @@ fn frobnicate(walrus: Option<Walrus>) { | |||
197 | } | 197 | } |
198 | ``` | 198 | ``` |
199 | 199 | ||
200 | Avoid preconditions that spawn function boundaries: | ||
201 | |||
202 | |||
203 | ```rust | ||
204 | // Good | ||
205 | fn string_literal_contents(s: &str) -> Option<&str> { | ||
206 | if s.starts_with('"') && s.ends_with('"') { | ||
207 | Some(&s[1..s.len() - 1]) | ||
208 | } else { | ||
209 | None | ||
210 | } | ||
211 | } | ||
212 | |||
213 | fn foo() { | ||
214 | let s: &str = ...; | ||
215 | if let Some(contents) = string_literal_contents(s) { | ||
216 | |||
217 | } | ||
218 | } | ||
219 | |||
220 | // Not as good | ||
221 | fn is_string_literal(s: &str) -> Option<&str> { | ||
222 | s.starts_with('"') && s.ends_with('"') | ||
223 | Some() | ||
224 | } | ||
225 | |||
226 | fn foo() { | ||
227 | let s: &str = ...; | ||
228 | if is_string_literal(s) { | ||
229 | let contents = &s[1..s.len() - 1]; | ||
230 | } | ||
231 | } | ||
232 | ``` | ||
233 | |||
234 | In the "Not as good" version, the precondition that `1` is a valid char boundary is checked in `is_string_literal` and utilized in `foo`. | ||
235 | In the "Good" version, precondition check and usage are checked in the same block, and then encoded in the types. | ||
236 | |||
200 | # Early Returns | 237 | # Early Returns |
201 | 238 | ||
202 | Do use early returns | 239 | Do use early returns |
@@ -271,6 +308,21 @@ if words.len() != 2 { | |||
271 | } | 308 | } |
272 | ``` | 309 | ``` |
273 | 310 | ||
311 | If allocation is inevitable, let the caller allocate the resource: | ||
312 | |||
313 | ```rust | ||
314 | // Good | ||
315 | fn frobnicate(s: String) { | ||
316 | ... | ||
317 | } | ||
318 | |||
319 | // Not as good | ||
320 | fn frobnicate(s: &str) { | ||
321 | let s = s.to_string(); | ||
322 | ... | ||
323 | } | ||
324 | ``` | ||
325 | |||
274 | # Avoid Monomorphization | 326 | # Avoid Monomorphization |
275 | 327 | ||
276 | Rust uses monomorphization to compile generic code, meaning that for each instantiation of a generic functions with concrete types, the function is compiled afresh, *per crate*. | 328 | Rust uses monomorphization to compile generic code, meaning that for each instantiation of a generic functions with concrete types, the function is compiled afresh, *per crate*. |