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The following code will fail the borrow checker:

fn at(&mut self, i: usize) -> Option<&T> {
    match self.vector.get(i) {
        Some(x) => Some(x),
        None => {
            self.mutate_vector_to_have_more_stuff();
            self.at(i)
        }
    }
}

I can see why: self.vector is still borrowed lexically through to the end, so I cannot borrow self again.

What is the right way to structure my scopes? The borrow persists into the match because I actually use it in the Some(x) branch, but in the None branch I no longer use the borrowed value, because there was no value to borrow to begin with.

I have a rewritten version that works for this specific case:

if i >= self.vector.len() {
    self.mutate_vector_to_have_more_stuff();
    self.at(i)
} else {
    self.vector.get(i)
}

This works because using len means that I witness the "nothing to borrow" before even trying to borrow anything, and then only borrow in the nested scope. I'm concerned that this wouldn't work in every case where I have an Option, though, there may not be a boolean-only variant of every Option-returning API.

Is there a way to restructure this code to work but still using the get call as the main way to know if there is a value or not?

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1 Answer 1

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This is a common problem due to the way lifetimes currently work in (stable) Rust. The standard solution would look something like this in your case:

fn at(&mut self, i: usize) -> Option<&T> {
    if let Some(x) = self.vector.get(i) {
        return Some(x);
    }
    // mutate self.vector
    self.at(i)
}

As you can probably see, the immutable borrow of self.vector only lasts as long as the if block, so a mutable borrow on it is possible as soon as it ends.

That said, Rust nightly has a work-around for this issue, if you want to enable the unstable non-lexical lifetimes feature. Your existing code should work fine if you just include the line #![feature(nll)] at the top of your crate.

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