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I wonder if anyone has a solution to allow implicit conversion from usize type (that we obtain from accessing array index, or getting vector length) to i32 ? Is it even possible?

Of course I assume that vector length and array bounds are within i32 limits.

2 Answers 2

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You can use the TryInto trait in function arguments to do implicit conversions from the perspective of callers. It still involves conversion, but it moves the complexity to the function being called:

use std::convert::TryInto;

fn stuff(val: impl TryInto<i32>) {
    // use try_into trait method
    let val = match val.try_into() {
        Ok(v) => v,
        Err(_) => panic!("couldn't fit in i32"),
    };
    println!("in stuff: val has {} leading zeros", val.leading_zeros());
}

fn main() {
    let letters = ['a', 'b', 'c'];
    let len = letters.len();
    println!("in main: len has {} leading zeros", len.leading_zeros());
    stuff(len); // implict conversion
}

outputs

in main: len has 62 leading zeros
in stuff: val has 30 leading zeros

Try on the playground

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  • Very nice, exactly what I was looking for! Thanks a lot! Any solution for indexes of arrays though? Mar 11, 2021 at 18:52
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    @AntoninGAVREL I don't think that implict conversion is possible for array indexing since the array indexing implementation is done in the standard library.
    – loops
    Mar 11, 2021 at 19:17
  • Ok, also TryInto seems to be the reverse of TryFrom, but wouldn't it be more efficient with as keyword (since we know that the conversion would work)? something like: fn stuff(val:usize as i32) { Mar 11, 2021 at 19:24
  • @AntoninGAVREL: Why do you know the conversion will work? An arbitrary usize might have a value greater than i32 can hold. Rust has to make the interface safe no matter who calls it. Feb 20 at 21:22
  • @ShadowRanger Precisely because the usize is not arbitrary. (for example if it was an i32 converted to usize previously) Feb 22 at 8:55
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I don't think there is a way to do it implicitly. If there is, it wouldn't be very idiomatic: Rust decided to avoid implicit conversions and ensure that all conversions are done explicitly.

For straightforward conversions, as is probably the best bet. For conversions where you're concerned about overflow, etc. you've got From and TryFrom. For small lengths converting to i32, length as i32 is probably the easiest.

It does make stuff a bit more verbose, but I find it's a fairly good compromise.

There's a good writeup in the Rust book on as here: https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/types/cast.html#casting

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  • "a bit more verbose" is an understatement ;) Mar 11, 2021 at 18:51

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