25

I have been playing with Rust by porting my Score4 AI engine to it - basing the work on my functional-style implementation in OCaml. I specifically wanted to see how Rust fares with functional-style code.

The end result: It works, and it's very fast - much faster than OCaml. It almost touches the speed of imperative-style C/C++ - which is really cool.

There's a thing that troubles me, though — why do I need two ampersands in the last line of this code?

let moves_and_scores: Vec<_> = moves_and_boards
    .iter()
    .map(|&(column,board)| (column, score_board(&board)))
    .collect();
let target_score = if maximize_or_minimize { 
    ORANGE_WINS 
} else { 
    YELLOW_WINS 
};
if let Some(killer_move) = moves_and_scores.iter()
    .find(|& &(_,score)| score==target_score) {
         ...

I added them is because the compiler errors "guided" me to it; but I am trying to understand why... I used the trick mentioned elsewhere in Stack Overflow to "ask" the compiler to tell me what type something is:

let moves_and_scores: Vec<_> = moves_and_boards
    .iter()
    .map(|&(column,board)| (column, score_board(&board)))
    .collect();
let () = moves_and_scores;

...which caused this error:

src/main.rs:108:9: 108:11 error: mismatched types:
 expected `collections::vec::Vec<(u32, i32)>`,
    found `()`
(expected struct `collections::vec::Vec`,
    found ()) [E0308]
src/main.rs:108     let () = moves_and_scores;

...as I expected, moves_and_scores is a vector of tuples: Vec<(u32, i32)>. But then, in the immediate next line, iter() and find() force me to use the hideous double ampersands in the closure parameter:

if let Some(killer_move) = moves_and_scores.iter()
    .find(|& &(_,score)| score==target_score) {

Why does the find closure need two ampersands? I could see why it may need one (pass the tuple by reference to save time/space) but why two? Is it because of the iter? That is, is the iter creating references, and then find expects a reference on each input, so a reference on a reference?

If this is so, isn't this, arguably, a rather ugly design flaw in Rust?

In fact, I would expect find and map and all the rest of the functional primitives to be parts of the collections themselves. Forcing me to iter() to do any kind of functional-style work seems burdensome, and even more so if it forces this kind of "double ampersands" in every possible functional chain.

I am hoping I am missing something obvious - any help/clarification most welcome.

2
  • 1
    Congratulations on managing the port, beating OCaml on functional style code mean that you did something right! Nov 30, 2015 at 13:37
  • @MatthieuM. Thanks! I was hoping there's a cleaner way to handle the functional chains (i.e. .iter().map(...).iter().filter() ... .iter().find(...)) without introducing an extra level of reference at every step - but it seems I can't avoid it.
    – ttsiodras
    Dec 1, 2015 at 8:48

1 Answer 1

26

This here

moves_and_scores.iter()

gives you an iterator over borrowed vector elements. If you follow the API doc what type this is, you'll notice that it's just the iterator for a borrowed slice and this implements Iterator with Item=&T where T is (u32, i32) in your case.

Then, you use find which takes a predicate which takes a &Item as parameter. Sice Item already is a reference in your case, the predicate has to take a &&(u32, i32).

pub trait Iterator {
    ...
    fn find<P>(&mut self, predicate: P) -> Option<Self::Item>
    where P: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> bool {...}
    ...            ^

It was probably defined like this because it's only supposed to inspect the item and return a bool. This does not require the item being passed by value.

If you want an iterator over (u32, i32) you could write

moves_and_scores.iter().cloned()

cloned() converts the iterator from one with an Item type &T to one with an Item type T if T is Clone. Another way to do it would be to use into_iter() instead of iter().

moves_and_scores.into_iter()

The difference between the two is that the first option clones the borrowed elements while the 2nd one consumes the vector and moves the elements out of it.

By writing the lambda like this

|&&(_, score)| score == target_score

you destructure the "double reference" and create a local copy of the i32. This is allowed since i32 is a simple type that is Copy.

Instead of destructuring the parameter of your predicate you could also write

|move_and_score| move_and_score.1 == target_score

because the dot operator automatically dereferences as many times as needed.

5
  • Thanks for your feedback! Does iter().cloned() have a performance impact? I mean, does it actually allocate "clones"? Also, I believe into_iter() will definitely have a performance impact, since it's moving semantics will mutate the source vector. I think the best is your third suggestion - using the "automatic dereference as many times as needed" - must read up on that.
    – ttsiodras
    Dec 1, 2015 at 8:52
  • 1
    BTW, any thoughts on why Rust chose not to have the functional operators (map, filter, etc) as part of the collections, and needs the .iter() first (which introduces an extra level of "reference-indirection" at each step)....?
    – ttsiodras
    Dec 1, 2015 at 9:05
  • 1
    @ttsiodras As for performance: None of it should really matter. Cloning a tuple of type (u32, i32) is very cheap. Don't let the word "clone" scare you. :-) For simpe "plain old data types" cloning and copying are basically the same. But some types cannot be copied because they are more complicated. Only in those cases, I would worry about cloning.
    – sellibitze
    Dec 1, 2015 at 16:49
  • 4
    @ttsiodras There are many different kinds of ways you could iterate over a collection (iter, iter_mut, into_iter, drain). Each have their uses and there isn't really a "right" way to do this. I guess, that's why you have to be specific.
    – sellibitze
    Dec 1, 2015 at 17:03
  • 1
    Rust is an amazing experience on software engineering
    – geckos
    Dec 25, 2019 at 13:34

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