The documentation says usize
is
Operations and constants for pointer-sized unsigned integers.
In most cases, I can replace usize
with u32
and nothing happens. So I don't understand why we need two types which are so alike.
Warning: This answer is legacy for Rust, usize
have been redefined as "can hold any memory location", see 95228 for very deep reasoning, TL;DR: a pointer is not just a number.
As the documentation states usize
is pointer-sized, thus its actual size depends on the architecture you are compiling your program for.
As an example, on a 32 bit x86 computer, usize = u32
, while on x86_64 computers, usize = u64
.
usize
gives you the guarantee to be always big enough to hold any pointer or any offset in a data structure, while u32
can be too small on some architectures.
u32
is often good. The standard library always use usize
when appropriate, and rust won't silently convert a u32
to a usize
, so you'll see when they are needed.
u32
can also be too big if you're working on embedded systems, which Rust as a systems language is designed to work well with. If u32
was always too small, the language probably would've been designed to silently convert u32
into usize
.
Commented
Oct 31, 2018 at 23:02
usize
might cause confusion in cases you are interested in deterministic behavior or serialisation.
Commented
May 15, 2019 at 0:45
u8
cannot be silently converted to u16
. But it would've been provided into()
and not just try_into()
.
Commented
Aug 30, 2022 at 22:18