(I’m just starting off with rust, so please be patient)
Is there an idiomatic way of writing the following as a one-liner, somehow informing rustc that it should keep the PathBuf
around?
// nevermind the fully-qualified names
// they are there to clarify the code
// (that's what I hope at least)
let dir: std::path::PathBuf = std::env::current_dir().unwrap();
let dir: &std::path::Path = dir.as_path();
// this won't do:
// let dir = std::env::current_dir().unwrap().as_path();
I do understand why rust complains that “temporary value dropped while borrowed” (I mean, the message says it all), but, since I don’t really need the PathBuf
for anything else, I was wondering if there’s an idiomatic to tell rust that it should extend its life until the end of the code block.
As someone else said I think the shadowing works well here.
I do also wanna mention that depending on why you need this conversion, you could use
impl AsRef<std::path::Path>
for your function signature so it can acceptor
. Then, just use that argument with e.g.
p.as_ref()
to get ain the function body
There is a general mechanism in Rust that allows language users to add their own sugar. It’s called macros 😉
macro_rules! keep { (let $id:ident = $expr:expr => $($tt:tt)+) => { let $id = $expr; let $id = $id$($tt)+; } } fn main() { keep!{ let path = std::env::current_dir().unwrap() => .as_path() }; println!("{path:?}"); }
You can remove
let
from the macro’s fragment specifier and invocation.While macros are cool and it’s good to keep them as an option in the back of the mind, it should be clarified that you’re not supposed to immediately reach for macros for small things you don’t quite like about the language.
Excessive macro use makes it impossible for others (including your future self) to read your code and there’s often good reasons why it’s designed like it is.
you’re not supposed to immediately reach for macros
correct
for small things you don’t quite like about the language.
incorrect
Excessive macro use makes it impossible for others (including your future self) to read your code
N/A. the macro above is trivial.
impossible for others to read your code and there’s often good reasons why it’s designed like it is.
fiction