46

I am trying to write a simple function in Rust that will ask user a question expecting answer of "you" or "me". It should return a boolean value or ask again if the user answers wrong. I came up with:

fn player_starts() -> bool {                                                    
    println!("Who will start (me/you)");                                       
    loop {                                                                      
        let input = readline::readline(">");                                    
        match input {                                                           
            Some("me") => return true,                                          
            Some("you") => return false,                                        
            _ => None,                                                          
        }                                                                          
    }                                                                           
}       

What I get is:

error: mismatched types:
 expected `collections::string::String`,
    found `&'static str`
(expected struct `collections::string::String`,
found &-ptr) [E0308]

Is there some way to coerce the literal to work here or is there some better way to achieve my goal?

2 Answers 2

44

The way you usually convert a &str to a String is to_owned, e.g.

"me".to_owned()

However, you can't do pattern matching on a String. You could expect a success, get a &str from the String then pattern match on that:

fn player_starts() -> bool {                                                    
    println!("Who will start (me/you)");                                       
    loop {                                                                      
        let input = readline::readline(">");
        match input.expect("Failed to read line").as_ref() {
            "me" => return true,                                          
            "you" => return false,
            _ => println!("Enter me or you"),
        }                                                                          
    }                                                                           
}
5
  • 4
    It's more idiomatic to use to_owned() or into() (in case the target type is known) rather than to_string(). The latter works through Display trait which invokes formatting code which introduces some overhead. Maybe if Rust gets impl specialization, this could be fixed, but we're not there yet. Sep 10, 2015 at 12:23
  • @VladimirMatveev thanks, still pretty new to Rust, so I guess I shouldn't be making such assertions based on minimal experience. Sep 10, 2015 at 12:30
  • Is the downvote due to the above or are there other issues with this solution? Sep 10, 2015 at 12:35
  • 2
    @TartanLlama My issue with your answer is that it will panic if input is None which doesn't seem terribly useful to me. (Not downvoting you, though)
    – fjh
    Sep 10, 2015 at 12:38
  • @TartanLlama I wouldn't go so far as Vladamir to say that to_owned is more idiomatic, there are disagreements among which of the three or four ways are best. Sep 10, 2015 at 13:36
24

This should work:

fn player_starts() -> bool {                      
    println!("Who will start me/you)");                    
    loop {
        let input = readline::readline(">");
        match input.as_ref().map(String::as_ref) {
            Some("me") => return true,
            Some("you") => return false,
            _ => ()
        }
    }
}

Note the expression in the match statement, where we convert from an Option<String> to an Option<&str>.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.