119

I can do this:

enum MyEnum {
    A(i32),
    B(i32),
}

but not this:

enum MyEnum {
    A(123), // 123 is a constant
    B(456), // 456 is a constant
}

I can create the structures for A and B with a single field and then implement that field, but I think there might be an easier way. Is there any?

7 Answers 7

161

The best way to answer this is working out why you want constants in an enum: are you associating a value with each variant, or do you want each variant to be that value (like an enum in C or C++)?

For the first case, it probably makes more sense to just leave the enum variants with no data, and make a function:

enum MyEnum {
    A,
    B,
}

impl MyEnum {
    fn value(&self) -> i32 {
        match *self {
            MyEnum::A => 123,
            MyEnum::B => 456,
        }
    }
}
// call like some_myenum_value.value()

This approach can be applied many times, to associate many separate pieces of information with each variant, e.g. maybe you want a .name() -> &'static str method too. In the future, these functions can even be marked as const functions.

For the second case, you can assign explicit integer tag values, just like C/C++:

enum MyEnum {
    A = 123,
    B = 456,
}

This can be matched on in all the same ways, but can also be cast to an integer MyEnum::A as i32. (Note that computations like MyEnum::A | MyEnum::B are not automatically legal in Rust: enums have specific values, they're not bit-flags.)

5
  • 3
    How do I match on the values (implemented in value function)? Mar 29, 2019 at 7:48
  • @MatejKormuth this is late, but, you would just match on the return value of the method. Assuming your enum value is stored in a variable called some_myenum_value, just do match some_myenum_value.value() { .... Dec 8, 2019 at 19:20
  • 1
    As of Rust 1.46.0, one can use pub const fn value(&self) -> i32 to avoid the overhead of evaluating the match statement at runtime.
    – U007D
    Nov 16, 2022 at 17:02
  • pub const fn will allow the function to be called in a const context, but it is unlikely to impact behaviour otherwise. Specifically const X: int = MyEnum::A.value() isn't allowed with just fn value, but is allowed with const fn value. When called outside a const context, the const doesn't do anything (e.g. the optimiser will inline and evaluate the match, if it can, with or without the const annotation).
    – huon
    Nov 17, 2022 at 0:40
  • Will the first case be optimised by the compiler? Feb 16 at 13:09
43

Creating an "enum" with constant values, can be augmented using structs and associated constants. This is similar to how crates like bitflags works and what it would generate.

Additionally, to prevent direct instantiation of MyEnum you can tag it with #[non_exhaustive].

#[non_exhaustive]
struct MyEnum;

impl MyEnum {
    pub const A: i32 = 123;
    pub const B: i32 = 456;
}

Then you simply use the "enum" as you otherwise would, by accessing MyEnum::A and MyEnum::B.

1
  • 3
    Can you iterate over every variant here ?
    – gruvw
    Jan 9 at 13:56
6

People looking at this may stumble upon the introduction and deprecation of FromPrimitive. A possible replacement which might also be useful here is enum_primitive. It allows you to use C-like enums and have them cast between numeric and logical representation:

#[macro_use]
extern crate enum_primitive;
extern crate num;

use num::FromPrimitive;

enum_from_primitive! {
    #[derive(Debug, PartialEq)]
    enum FooBar {
        Foo = 17,
        Bar = 42,
        Baz,
    }
}

fn main() {
    assert_eq!(FooBar::from_i32(17), Some(FooBar::Foo));
    assert_eq!(FooBar::from_i32(42), Some(FooBar::Bar));
    assert_eq!(FooBar::from_i32(43), Some(FooBar::Baz));
    assert_eq!(FooBar::from_i32(91), None);
}
5

How about this?

enum MyEnum {
    A = 123,
    B = 456,
}

assert_eq!(MyEnum::A as i32, 123i32);
assert_eq!(MyEnum::B as i32, 456i32);
1
  • While this solution appealed the most to me because of its simplicity, I couldn't get it to work while testing a variable using match. The MyEnum::A values can not be cast to i32 in a match arm.
    – Code4R7
    Nov 14 at 12:13
4

The enum-map crate provides the ability to assign a value to the enum record. What is more, you can use this macro with different value types.

use enum_map::{enum_map, Enum}; // 0.6.2

#[derive(Debug, Enum)]
enum Example {
    A,
    B,
    C,
}

fn main() {
    let mut map = enum_map! {
        Example::A => 1,
        Example::B => 2,
        Example::C => 3,
    };
    map[Example::C] = 4;

    assert_eq!(map[Example::A], 1);

    for (key, &value) in &map {
        println!("{:?} has {} as value.", key, value);
    }
}
1

Just to give another idea.

#[allow(non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
mod MyEnum {
    pub const A: i32 = 123;
    pub const B: i32 = 456;
}

Then you can simply use it by accessing MyEnum::A and MyEnum::B or use MyEnum::*.

The advantage of doing this over associated constants is that you can even nest more enums.

#[allow(non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
mod MyEnum {
    pub const A: i32 = 123;
    pub const B: i32 = 456;

    #[allow(non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
    mod SubEnum {
        pub const C: i32 = 789;
    }
}

For my project I wrote a macro that automatically generates indexes and sets initial values.

#[macro_export]
macro_rules! cnum {
    (@step $_idx:expr,) => {};
    (@step $idx:expr, $head:ident, $($tail:ident,)*) => {
        pub const $head: usize = $idx;
        cnum!(@step $idx + 1usize, $($tail,)*);
    };
    ($name:ident; $($n:ident),* $(,)* $({ $($i:item)* })?) => {
        cnum!($name; 0usize; $($n),* $({ $($i)* })?);
    };
    ($name:ident; $start:expr; $($n:ident),* $(,)* $({ $($i:item)* })?) => {
        #[macro_use]
        #[allow(dead_code, non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
        pub mod $name {
            use crate::cnum;
            $($($i)*)?
            cnum!(@step $start, $($n,)*);
        }
    };
}

Then you can use it like this,

cnum! { Tokens;
    EOF,
    WhiteSpace,
    Identifier,
    {
        cnum! { Literal; 100;
            Numeric,
            String,
            True,
            False,
            Nil,
        }

        cnum! { Keyword; 200;
            For,
            If,
            Return,
        }
    }
}
1

I have created a crate enumeration just for this.

Example using my crate:

use enumeration::prelude::*;

enumerate!(MyEnum(u8; i32)
    A = 123
    B = 456
);

pub fn main() {
    assert_eq!(*MyEnum::A.value(), 123);
    assert_eq!(*MyEnum::B.value(), 456);
}

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