Auto merge of #28914 - steveklabnik:doc_iterator, r=alexcrichton
This replaces what was there with a comprehensive overview. Thanks to @hoverbear for suggesting that these docs needed improvement.
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// option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed
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// except according to those terms.
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//! Composable external iterators
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//! Composable external iteration
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//!
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//! # The `Iterator` trait
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//! If you've found yourself with a collection of some kind, and needed to
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//! perform an operation on the elements of said collection, you'll quickly run
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//! into 'iterators'. Iterators are heavily used in idiomatic Rust code, so
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//! it's worth becoming familiar with them.
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//!
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//! This module defines Rust's core iteration trait. The `Iterator` trait has
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//! one unimplemented method, `next`. All other methods are derived through
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//! default methods to perform operations such as `zip`, `chain`, `enumerate`,
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//! and `fold`.
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//! Before explaining more, let's talk about how this module is structured:
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//!
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//! The goal of this module is to unify iteration across all containers in Rust.
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//! An iterator can be considered as a state machine which is used to track
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//! which element will be yielded next.
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//! # Organization
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//!
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//! There are various extensions also defined in this module to assist with
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//! various types of iteration, such as the `DoubleEndedIterator` for iterating
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//! in reverse, the `FromIterator` trait for creating a container from an
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//! iterator, and much more.
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//! This module is largely organized by type:
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//!
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//! # Rust's `for` loop
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//! * [Traits] are the core portion: these traits define what kind of iterators
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//! exist and what you can do with them. The methods of these traits are worth
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//! putting some extra study time into.
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//! * [Functions] provide some helpful ways to create some basic iterators.
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//! * [Structs] are often the return types of the various methods on this
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//! module's traits. You'll usually want to look at the method that creates
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//! the `struct`, rather than the `struct` itself. For more detail about why,
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//! see '[Implementing Iterator](#implementing-iterator)'.
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//!
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//! The special syntax used by rust's `for` loop is based around the
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//! `IntoIterator` trait defined in this module. `for` loops can be viewed as a
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//! syntactical expansion into a `loop`, for example, the `for` loop in this
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//! example is essentially translated to the `loop` below.
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//! [Traits]: #traits
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//! [Functions]: #functions
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//! [Structs]: #structs
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//!
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//! That's it! Let's dig into iterators.
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//!
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//! # Iterator
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//!
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//! The heart and soul of this module is the [`Iterator`] trait. The core of
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//! [`Iterator`] looks like this:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let values = vec![1, 2, 3];
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//! trait Iterator {
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//! type Item;
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//! fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item>;
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! An iterator has a method, [`next()`], which when called, returns an
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//! [`Option`]`<Item>`. [`next()`] will return `Some(Item)` as long as there
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//! are elements, and once they've all been exhausted, will return `None` to
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//! indicate that iteration is finished. Individual iterators may choose to
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//! resume iteration, and so calling [`next()`] again may or may not eventually
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//! start returning `Some(Item)` again at some point.
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//!
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//! [`Iterator`]'s full definition includes a number of other methods as well,
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//! but they are default methods, built on top of [`next()`], and so you get
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//! them for free.
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//!
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//! Iterators are also composable, and it's common to chain them together to do
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//! more complex forms of processing. See the [Adapters](#adapters) section
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//! below for more details.
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//!
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//! [`Iterator`]: trait.Iterator.html
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//! [`next()`]: trait.Iterator.html#tymethod.next
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//! [`Option`]: ../option/enum.Option.html
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//!
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//! # The three forms of iteration
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//!
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//! There are three common methods which can create iterators from a collection:
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//!
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//! * `iter()`, which iterates over `&T`.
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//! * `iter_mut()`, which iterates over `&mut T`.
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//! * `into_iter()`, which iterates over `T`.
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//!
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//! Various things in the standard library may implement one or more of the
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//! three, where appropriate.
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//!
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//! # Implementing Iterator
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//!
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//! Creating an iterator of your own involves two steps: creating a `struct` to
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//! hold the iterator's state, and then `impl`ementing [`Iterator`] for that
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//! `struct`. This is why there are so many `struct`s in this module: there is
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//! one for each iterator and iterator adapter.
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//!
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//! Let's make an iterator named `Counter` which counts from `1` to `5`:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! // First, the struct:
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//!
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//! /// An iterator which counts from one to five
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//! struct Counter {
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//! count: i32,
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//! }
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//!
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//! // we want our count to start at one, so let's add a new() method to help.
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//! // This isn't strictly necessary, but is convenient. Note that we start
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//! // `count` at zero, we'll see why in `next()`'s implementation below.
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//! impl Counter {
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//! fn new() -> Counter {
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//! Counter { count: 0 }
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//! }
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//! }
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//!
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//! // Then, we implement `Iterator` for our `Counter`:
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//!
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//! impl Iterator for Counter {
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//! // we will be counting with i32
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//! type Item = i32;
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//!
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//! // next() is the only required method
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//! fn next(&mut self) -> Option<i32> {
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//! // increment our count. This is why we started at zero.
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//! self.count += 1;
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//!
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//! // check to see if we've finished counting or not.
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//! if self.count < 6 {
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//! Some(self.count)
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//! } else {
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//! None
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//! }
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//! }
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//! }
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//!
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//! // And now we can use it!
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//!
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//! let mut counter = Counter::new();
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//!
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//! let x = counter.next().unwrap();
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//!
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//! let x = counter.next().unwrap();
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//!
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//! let x = counter.next().unwrap();
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//!
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//! let x = counter.next().unwrap();
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//!
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//! let x = counter.next().unwrap();
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//! ```
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//!
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//! This will print `1` through `5`, each on their own line.
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//!
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//! Calling `next()` this way gets repetitive. Rust has a construct which can
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//! call `next()` on your iterator, until it reaches `None`. Let's go over that
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//! next.
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//!
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//! # for Loops and IntoIterator
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//!
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//! Rust's `for` loop syntax is actually sugar for iterators. Here's a basic
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//! example of `for`:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let values = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
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//!
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//! for x in values {
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! // Rough translation of the iteration without a `for` iterator.
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//! # let values = vec![1, 2, 3];
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//! let mut it = values.into_iter();
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//! loop {
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//! match it.next() {
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//! Some(x) => println!("{}", x),
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//! None => break,
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//! }
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//! This will print the numbers one through five, each on their own line. But
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//! you'll notice something here: we never called anything on our vector to
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//! produce an iterator. What gives?
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//!
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//! There's a trait in the standard library for converting something into an
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//! iterator: [`IntoIterator`]. This trait has one method, [`into_iter()`],
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//! which converts the thing implementing [`IntoIterator`] into an iterator.
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//! Let's take a look at that `for` loop again, and what the compiler converts
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//! it into:
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//!
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//! [`IntoIterator`]: trait.IntoIterator.html
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//! [`into_iter()`]: trait.IntoIterator.html#tymethod.into_iter
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let values = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
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//!
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//! for x in values {
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! Because `Iterator`s implement `IntoIterator`, this `for` loop syntax can be
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//! applied to any iterator over any type.
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//! Rust de-sugars this into:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let values = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
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//! {
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//! let result = match values.into_iter() {
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//! mut iter => loop {
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//! match iter.next() {
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//! Some(x) => { println!("{}", x); },
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//! None => break,
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//! }
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//! },
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//! };
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//! result
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! First, we call `into_iter()` on the value. Then, we match on the iterator
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//! that returns, calling [`next()`] over and over until we see a `None`. At
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//! that point, we `break` out of the loop, and we're done iterating.
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//!
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//! There's one more subtle bit here: the standard library contains an
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//! interesting implementation of [`IntoIterator`]:
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//!
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//! ```ignore
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//! impl<I> IntoIterator for I where I: Iterator
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//! ```
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//!
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//! In other words, all [`Iterator`]s implement [`IntoIterator`], by just
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//! returning themselves. This means two things:
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//!
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//! 1. If you're writing an [`Iterator`], you can use it with a `for` loop.
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//! 2. If you're creating a collection, implementing [`IntoIterator`] for it
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//! will allow your collection to be used with the `for` loop.
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//!
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//! # Adapters
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//!
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//! Functions which take an [`Iterator`] and return another [`Iterator`] are
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//! often called 'iterator adapters', as they're a form of the 'adapter
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//! pattern'.
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//!
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//! Common iterator adapters include [`map()`], [`take()`], and [`collect()`].
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//! For more, see their documentation.
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//!
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//! [`map()`]: trait.Iterator.html#method.map
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//! [`take()`]: trait.Iterator.html#method.take
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//! [`collect()`]: trait.Iterator.html#method.collect
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//!
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//! # Laziness
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//!
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//! Iterators (and iterator [adapters](#adapters)) are *lazy*. This means that
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//! just creating an iterator doesn't _do_ a whole lot. Nothing really happens
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//! until you call [`next()`]. This is sometimes a source of confusion when
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//! creating an iterator solely for its side effects. For example, the [`map()`]
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//! method calls a closure on each element it iterates over:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let v = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
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//! v.iter().map(|x| println!("{}", x));
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//! ```
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//!
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//! This will not print any values, as we only created an iterator, rather than
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//! using it. The compiler will warn us about this kind of behavior:
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//!
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//! ```text
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//! warning: unused result which must be used: iterator adaptors are lazy and
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//! do nothing unless consumed
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//! ```
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//!
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//! The idiomatic way to write a [`map()`] for its side effects is to use a
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//! `for` loop instead:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let v = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
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//!
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//! for x in &v {
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//! println!("{}", x);
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! [`map()`]: trait.Iterator.html#method.map
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//!
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//! The two most common ways to evaluate an iterator are to use a `for` loop
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//! like this, or using the [`collect()`] adapter to produce a new collection.
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//!
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//! [`collect()`]: trait.Iterator.html#method.collect
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//!
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//! # Infinity
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//!
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//! Iterators do not have to be finite. As an example, an open-ended range is
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//! an infinite iterator:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let numbers = 0..;
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//! ```
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//!
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//! It is common to use the [`take()`] iterator adapter to turn an infinite
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//! iterator into a finite one:
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//!
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//! ```
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//! let numbers = 0..;
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//! let five_numbers = numbers.take(5);
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//!
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//! for number in five_numbers {
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//! println!("{}", number);
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//! }
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//! ```
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//!
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//! This will print the numbers `0` through `4`, each on their own line.
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//!
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//! [`take()`]: trait.Iterator.html#method.take
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#![stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")]
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