On this page
Struct std::string::String
pub struct String { /* private fields */ }
A UTF-8–encoded, growable string.
The String
type is the most common string type that has ownership over the contents of the string. It has a close relationship with its borrowed counterpart, the primitive str
.
Examples
You can create a String
from a literal string with String::from
:
let hello = String::from("Hello, world!");
You can append a char
to a String
with the push
method, and append a &str
with the push_str
method:
let mut hello = String::from("Hello, ");
hello.push('w');
hello.push_str("orld!");
If you have a vector of UTF-8 bytes, you can create a String
from it with the from_utf8
method:
// some bytes, in a vector
let sparkle_heart = vec![240, 159, 146, 150];
// We know these bytes are valid, so we'll use `unwrap()`.
let sparkle_heart = String::from_utf8(sparkle_heart).unwrap();
assert_eq!("💖", sparkle_heart);
UTF-8
String
s are always valid UTF-8. If you need a non-UTF-8 string, consider OsString
. It is similar, but without the UTF-8 constraint. Because UTF-8 is a variable width encoding, String
s are typically smaller than an array of the same chars
:
use std::mem;
// `s` is ASCII which represents each `char` as one byte
let s = "hello";
assert_eq!(s.len(), 5);
// A `char` array with the same contents would be longer because
// every `char` is four bytes
let s = ['h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o'];
let size: usize = s.into_iter().map(|c| mem::size_of_val(&c)).sum();
assert_eq!(size, 20);
// However, for non-ASCII strings, the difference will be smaller
// and sometimes they are the same
let s = "💖💖💖💖💖";
assert_eq!(s.len(), 20);
let s = ['💖', '💖', '💖', '💖', '💖'];
let size: usize = s.into_iter().map(|c| mem::size_of_val(&c)).sum();
assert_eq!(size, 20);
This raises interesting questions as to how s[i]
should work. What should i
be here? Several options include byte indices and char
indices but, because of UTF-8 encoding, only byte indices would provide constant time indexing. Getting the i
th char
, for example, is available using chars
:
let s = "hello";
let third_character = s.chars().nth(2);
assert_eq!(third_character, Some('l'));
let s = "💖💖💖💖💖";
let third_character = s.chars().nth(2);
assert_eq!(third_character, Some('💖'));
Next, what should s[i]
return? Because indexing returns a reference to underlying data it could be &u8
, &[u8]
, or something else similar. Since we’re only providing one index, &u8
makes the most sense but that might not be what the user expects and can be explicitly achieved with as_bytes()
:
// The first byte is 104 - the byte value of `'h'`
let s = "hello";
assert_eq!(s.as_bytes()[0], 104);
// or
assert_eq!(s.as_bytes()[0], b'h');
// The first byte is 240 which isn't obviously useful
let s = "💖💖💖💖💖";
assert_eq!(s.as_bytes()[0], 240);
Due to these ambiguities/restrictions, indexing with a usize
is simply forbidden:
let s = "hello";
// The following will not compile!
println!("The first letter of s is {}", s[0]);
It is more clear, however, how &s[i..j]
should work (that is, indexing with a range). It should accept byte indices (to be constant-time) and return a &str
which is UTF-8 encoded. This is also called “string slicing”. Note this will panic if the byte indices provided are not character boundaries - see is_char_boundary
for more details. See the implementations for SliceIndex<str>
for more details on string slicing. For a non-panicking version of string slicing, see get
.
The bytes
and chars
methods return iterators over the bytes and codepoints of the string, respectively. To iterate over codepoints along with byte indices, use char_indices
.
Deref
String
implements Deref<Target = str>
, and so inherits all of str
’s methods. In addition, this means that you can pass a String
to a function which takes a &str
by using an ampersand (&
):
fn takes_str(s: &str) { }
let s = String::from("Hello");
takes_str(&s);
This will create a &str
from the String
and pass it in. This conversion is very inexpensive, and so generally, functions will accept &str
s as arguments unless they need a String
for some specific reason.
In certain cases Rust doesn’t have enough information to make this conversion, known as Deref
coercion. In the following example a string slice &'a str
implements the trait TraitExample
, and the function example_func
takes anything that implements the trait. In this case Rust would need to make two implicit conversions, which Rust doesn’t have the means to do. For that reason, the following example will not compile.
trait TraitExample {}
impl<'a> TraitExample for &'a str {}
fn example_func<A: TraitExample>(example_arg: A) {}
let example_string = String::from("example_string");
example_func(&example_string);
There are two options that would work instead. The first would be to change the line example_func(&example_string);
to example_func(example_string.as_str());
, using the method as_str()
to explicitly extract the string slice containing the string. The second way changes example_func(&example_string);
to example_func(&*example_string);
. In this case we are dereferencing a String
to a str
, then referencing the str
back to &str
. The second way is more idiomatic, however both work to do the conversion explicitly rather than relying on the implicit conversion.
Representation
A String
is made up of three components: a pointer to some bytes, a length, and a capacity. The pointer points to an internal buffer String
uses to store its data. The length is the number of bytes currently stored in the buffer, and the capacity is the size of the buffer in bytes. As such, the length will always be less than or equal to the capacity.
This buffer is always stored on the heap.
You can look at these with the as_ptr
, len
, and capacity
methods:
use std::mem;
let story = String::from("Once upon a time...");
// Prevent automatically dropping the String's data
let mut story = mem::ManuallyDrop::new(story);
let ptr = story.as_mut_ptr();
let len = story.len();
let capacity = story.capacity();
// story has nineteen bytes
assert_eq!(19, len);
// We can re-build a String out of ptr, len, and capacity. This is all
// unsafe because we are responsible for making sure the components are
// valid:
let s = unsafe { String::from_raw_parts(ptr, len, capacity) } ;
assert_eq!(String::from("Once upon a time..."), s);
If a String
has enough capacity, adding elements to it will not re-allocate. For example, consider this program:
let mut s = String::new();
println!("{}", s.capacity());
for _ in 0..5 {
s.push_str("hello");
println!("{}", s.capacity());
}
This will output the following:
0
8
16
16
32
32
At first, we have no memory allocated at all, but as we append to the string, it increases its capacity appropriately. If we instead use the with_capacity
method to allocate the correct capacity initially:
let mut s = String::with_capacity(25);
println!("{}", s.capacity());
for _ in 0..5 {
s.push_str("hello");
println!("{}", s.capacity());
}
We end up with a different output:
25
25
25
25
25
25
Here, there’s no need to allocate more memory inside the loop.
Implementations
impl String
pub const fn new() -> String
Creates a new empty String
.
Given that the String
is empty, this will not allocate any initial buffer. While that means that this initial operation is very inexpensive, it may cause excessive allocation later when you add data. If you have an idea of how much data the String
will hold, consider the with_capacity
method to prevent excessive re-allocation.
Examples
let s = String::new();
pub fn with_capacity(capacity: usize) -> String
Creates a new empty String
with at least the specified capacity.
String
s have an internal buffer to hold their data. The capacity is the length of that buffer, and can be queried with the capacity
method. This method creates an empty String
, but one with an initial buffer that can hold at least capacity
bytes. This is useful when you may be appending a bunch of data to the String
, reducing the number of reallocations it needs to do.
If the given capacity is 0
, no allocation will occur, and this method is identical to the new
method.
Examples
let mut s = String::with_capacity(10);
// The String contains no chars, even though it has capacity for more
assert_eq!(s.len(), 0);
// These are all done without reallocating...
let cap = s.capacity();
for _ in 0..10 {
s.push('a');
}
assert_eq!(s.capacity(), cap);
// ...but this may make the string reallocate
s.push('a');
pub fn from_utf8(vec: Vec<u8>) -> Result<String, FromUtf8Error>
Converts a vector of bytes to a String
.
A string (String
) is made of bytes (u8
), and a vector of bytes (Vec<u8>
) is made of bytes, so this function converts between the two. Not all byte slices are valid String
s, however: String
requires that it is valid UTF-8. from_utf8()
checks to ensure that the bytes are valid UTF-8, and then does the conversion.
If you are sure that the byte slice is valid UTF-8, and you don’t want to incur the overhead of the validity check, there is an unsafe version of this function, from_utf8_unchecked
, which has the same behavior but skips the check.
This method will take care to not copy the vector, for efficiency’s sake.
If you need a &str
instead of a String
, consider str::from_utf8
.
The inverse of this method is into_bytes
.
Errors
Returns Err
if the slice is not UTF-8 with a description as to why the provided bytes are not UTF-8. The vector you moved in is also included.
Examples
Basic usage:
// some bytes, in a vector
let sparkle_heart = vec![240, 159, 146, 150];
// We know these bytes are valid, so we'll use `unwrap()`.
let sparkle_heart = String::from_utf8(sparkle_heart).unwrap();
assert_eq!("💖", sparkle_heart);
Incorrect bytes:
// some invalid bytes, in a vector
let sparkle_heart = vec![0, 159, 146, 150];
assert!(String::from_utf8(sparkle_heart).is_err());
See the docs for FromUtf8Error
for more details on what you can do with this error.
pub fn from_utf8_lossy(v: &[u8]) -> Cow<'_, str>
Converts a slice of bytes to a string, including invalid characters.
Strings are made of bytes (u8
), and a slice of bytes (&[u8]
) is made of bytes, so this function converts between the two. Not all byte slices are valid strings, however: strings are required to be valid UTF-8. During this conversion, from_utf8_lossy()
will replace any invalid UTF-8 sequences with U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
, which looks like this: �
If you are sure that the byte slice is valid UTF-8, and you don’t want to incur the overhead of the conversion, there is an unsafe version of this function, from_utf8_unchecked
, which has the same behavior but skips the checks.
This function returns a Cow<'a, str>
. If our byte slice is invalid UTF-8, then we need to insert the replacement characters, which will change the size of the string, and hence, require a String
. But if it’s already valid UTF-8, we don’t need a new allocation. This return type allows us to handle both cases.
Examples
Basic usage:
// some bytes, in a vector
let sparkle_heart = vec![240, 159, 146, 150];
let sparkle_heart = String::from_utf8_lossy(&sparkle_heart);
assert_eq!("💖", sparkle_heart);
Incorrect bytes:
// some invalid bytes
let input = b"Hello \xF0\x90\x80World";
let output = String::from_utf8_lossy(input);
assert_eq!("Hello �World", output);
pub fn from_utf16(v: &[u16]) -> Result<String, FromUtf16Error>
Decode a UTF-16–encoded vector v
into a String
, returning Err
if v
contains any invalid data.
Examples
// 𝄞music
let v = &[0xD834, 0xDD1E, 0x006d, 0x0075,
0x0073, 0x0069, 0x0063];
assert_eq!(String::from("𝄞music"),
String::from_utf16(v).unwrap());
// 𝄞mu<invalid>ic
let v = &[0xD834, 0xDD1E, 0x006d, 0x0075,
0xD800, 0x0069, 0x0063];
assert!(String::from_utf16(v).is_err());
pub fn from_utf16_lossy(v: &[u16]) -> String
Decode a UTF-16–encoded slice v
into a String
, replacing invalid data with the replacement character (U+FFFD
).
Unlike from_utf8_lossy
which returns a Cow<'a, str>
, from_utf16_lossy
returns a String
since the UTF-16 to UTF-8 conversion requires a memory allocation.
Examples
// 𝄞mus<invalid>ic<invalid>
let v = &[0xD834, 0xDD1E, 0x006d, 0x0075,
0x0073, 0xDD1E, 0x0069, 0x0063,
0xD834];
assert_eq!(String::from("𝄞mus\u{FFFD}ic\u{FFFD}"),
String::from_utf16_lossy(v));
pub fn from_utf16le(v: &[u8]) -> Result<String, FromUtf16Error>
str_from_utf16_endian
#116258)
Decode a UTF-16LE–encoded vector v
into a String
, returning Err
if v
contains any invalid data.
Examples
Basic usage:
#![feature(str_from_utf16_endian)]
// 𝄞music
let v = &[0x34, 0xD8, 0x1E, 0xDD, 0x6d, 0x00, 0x75, 0x00,
0x73, 0x00, 0x69, 0x00, 0x63, 0x00];
assert_eq!(String::from("𝄞music"),
String::from_utf16le(v).unwrap());
// 𝄞mu<invalid>ic
let v = &[0x34, 0xD8, 0x1E, 0xDD, 0x6d, 0x00, 0x75, 0x00,
0x00, 0xD8, 0x69, 0x00, 0x63, 0x00];
assert!(String::from_utf16le(v).is_err());
pub fn from_utf16le_lossy(v: &[u8]) -> String
str_from_utf16_endian
#116258)
Decode a UTF-16LE–encoded slice v
into a String
, replacing invalid data with the replacement character (U+FFFD
).
Unlike from_utf8_lossy
which returns a Cow<'a, str>
, from_utf16le_lossy
returns a String
since the UTF-16 to UTF-8 conversion requires a memory allocation.
Examples
Basic usage:
#![feature(str_from_utf16_endian)]
// 𝄞mus<invalid>ic<invalid>
let v = &[0x34, 0xD8, 0x1E, 0xDD, 0x6d, 0x00, 0x75, 0x00,
0x73, 0x00, 0x1E, 0xDD, 0x69, 0x00, 0x63, 0x00,
0x34, 0xD8];
assert_eq!(String::from("𝄞mus\u{FFFD}ic\u{FFFD}"),
String::from_utf16le_lossy(v));
pub fn from_utf16be(v: &[u8]) -> Result<String, FromUtf16Error>
str_from_utf16_endian
#116258)
Decode a UTF-16BE–encoded vector v
into a String
, returning Err
if v
contains any invalid data.
Examples
Basic usage:
#![feature(str_from_utf16_endian)]
// 𝄞music
let v = &[0xD8, 0x34, 0xDD, 0x1E, 0x00, 0x6d, 0x00, 0x75,
0x00, 0x73, 0x00, 0x69, 0x00, 0x63];
assert_eq!(String::from("𝄞music"),
String::from_utf16be(v).unwrap());
// 𝄞mu<invalid>ic
let v = &[0xD8, 0x34, 0xDD, 0x1E, 0x00, 0x6d, 0x00, 0x75,
0xD8, 0x00, 0x00, 0x69, 0x00, 0x63];
assert!(String::from_utf16be(v).is_err());
pub fn from_utf16be_lossy(v: &[u8]) -> String
str_from_utf16_endian
#116258)
Decode a UTF-16BE–encoded slice v
into a String
, replacing invalid data with the replacement character (U+FFFD
).
Unlike from_utf8_lossy
which returns a Cow<'a, str>
, from_utf16le_lossy
returns a String
since the UTF-16 to UTF-8 conversion requires a memory allocation.
Examples
Basic usage:
#![feature(str_from_utf16_endian)]
// 𝄞mus<invalid>ic<invalid>
let v = &[0xD8, 0x34, 0xDD, 0x1E, 0x00, 0x6d, 0x00, 0x75,
0x00, 0x73, 0xDD, 0x1E, 0x00, 0x69, 0x00, 0x63,
0xD8, 0x34];
assert_eq!(String::from("𝄞mus\u{FFFD}ic\u{FFFD}"),
String::from_utf16be_lossy(v));
pub fn into_raw_parts(self) -> (*mut u8, usize, usize)
vec_into_raw_parts
#65816)
Decomposes a String
into its raw components.
Returns the raw pointer to the underlying data, the length of the string (in bytes), and the allocated capacity of the data (in bytes). These are the same arguments in the same order as the arguments to from_raw_parts
.
After calling this function, the caller is responsible for the memory previously managed by the String
. The only way to do this is to convert the raw pointer, length, and capacity back into a String
with the from_raw_parts
function, allowing the destructor to perform the cleanup.
Examples
#![feature(vec_into_raw_parts)]
let s = String::from("hello");
let (ptr, len, cap) = s.into_raw_parts();
let rebuilt = unsafe { String::from_raw_parts(ptr, len, cap) };
assert_eq!(rebuilt, "hello");
pub unsafe fn from_raw_parts(
buf: *mut u8,
length: usize,
capacity: usize
) -> String
Creates a new String
from a length, capacity, and pointer.
Safety
This is highly unsafe, due to the number of invariants that aren’t checked:
- The memory at
buf
needs to have been previously allocated by the same allocator the standard library uses, with a required alignment of exactly 1. length
needs to be less than or equal tocapacity
.capacity
needs to be the correct value.- The first
length
bytes atbuf
need to be valid UTF-8.
Violating these may cause problems like corrupting the allocator’s internal data structures. For example, it is normally not safe to build a String
from a pointer to a C char
array containing UTF-8 unless you are certain that array was originally allocated by the Rust standard library’s allocator.
The ownership of buf
is effectively transferred to the String
which may then deallocate, reallocate or change the contents of memory pointed to by the pointer at will. Ensure that nothing else uses the pointer after calling this function.
Examples
use std::mem;
unsafe {
let s = String::from("hello");
// Prevent automatically dropping the String's data
let mut s = mem::ManuallyDrop::new(s);
let ptr = s.as_mut_ptr();
let len = s.len();
let capacity = s.capacity();
let s = String::from_raw_parts(ptr, len, capacity);
assert_eq!(String::from("hello"), s);
}
pub unsafe fn from_utf8_unchecked(bytes: Vec<u8>) -> String
Converts a vector of bytes to a String
without checking that the string contains valid UTF-8.
See the safe version, from_utf8
, for more details.
Safety
This function is unsafe because it does not check that the bytes passed to it are valid UTF-8. If this constraint is violated, it may cause memory unsafety issues with future users of the String
, as the rest of the standard library assumes that String
s are valid UTF-8.
Examples
// some bytes, in a vector
let sparkle_heart = vec![240, 159, 146, 150];
let sparkle_heart = unsafe {
String::from_utf8_unchecked(sparkle_heart)
};
assert_eq!("💖", sparkle_heart);
pub fn into_bytes(self) -> Vec<u8> ⓘ
Converts a String
into a byte vector.
This consumes the String
, so we do not need to copy its contents.
Examples
let s = String::from("hello");
let bytes = s.into_bytes();
assert_eq!(&[104, 101, 108, 108, 111][..], &bytes[..]);
pub fn as_str(&self) -> &str
Extracts a string slice containing the entire String
.
Examples
let s = String::from("foo");
assert_eq!("foo", s.as_str());
pub fn as_mut_str(&mut self) -> &mut str
Converts a String
into a mutable string slice.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("foobar");
let s_mut_str = s.as_mut_str();
s_mut_str.make_ascii_uppercase();
assert_eq!("FOOBAR", s_mut_str);
pub fn push_str(&mut self, string: &str)
Appends a given string slice onto the end of this String
.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("foo");
s.push_str("bar");
assert_eq!("foobar", s);
pub fn extend_from_within<R>(&mut self, src: R)
where
R: RangeBounds<usize>,
string_extend_from_within
#103806)
Copies elements from src
range to the end of the string.
Panics
Panics if the starting point or end point do not lie on a char
boundary, or if they’re out of bounds.
Examples
#![feature(string_extend_from_within)]
let mut string = String::from("abcde");
string.extend_from_within(2..);
assert_eq!(string, "abcdecde");
string.extend_from_within(..2);
assert_eq!(string, "abcdecdeab");
string.extend_from_within(4..8);
assert_eq!(string, "abcdecdeabecde");
pub fn capacity(&self) -> usize
Returns this String
’s capacity, in bytes.
Examples
let s = String::with_capacity(10);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 10);
pub fn reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
Reserves capacity for at least additional
bytes more than the current length. The allocator may reserve more space to speculatively avoid frequent allocations. After calling reserve
, capacity will be greater than or equal to self.len() + additional
. Does nothing if capacity is already sufficient.
Panics
Panics if the new capacity overflows usize
.
Examples
Basic usage:
let mut s = String::new();
s.reserve(10);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 10);
This might not actually increase the capacity:
let mut s = String::with_capacity(10);
s.push('a');
s.push('b');
// s now has a length of 2 and a capacity of at least 10
let capacity = s.capacity();
assert_eq!(2, s.len());
assert!(capacity >= 10);
// Since we already have at least an extra 8 capacity, calling this...
s.reserve(8);
// ... doesn't actually increase.
assert_eq!(capacity, s.capacity());
pub fn reserve_exact(&mut self, additional: usize)
Reserves the minimum capacity for at least additional
bytes more than the current length. Unlike reserve
, this will not deliberately over-allocate to speculatively avoid frequent allocations. After calling reserve_exact
, capacity will be greater than or equal to self.len() + additional
. Does nothing if the capacity is already sufficient.
Panics
Panics if the new capacity overflows usize
.
Examples
Basic usage:
let mut s = String::new();
s.reserve_exact(10);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 10);
This might not actually increase the capacity:
let mut s = String::with_capacity(10);
s.push('a');
s.push('b');
// s now has a length of 2 and a capacity of at least 10
let capacity = s.capacity();
assert_eq!(2, s.len());
assert!(capacity >= 10);
// Since we already have at least an extra 8 capacity, calling this...
s.reserve_exact(8);
// ... doesn't actually increase.
assert_eq!(capacity, s.capacity());
pub fn try_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize) -> Result<(), TryReserveError>
Tries to reserve capacity for at least additional
bytes more than the current length. The allocator may reserve more space to speculatively avoid frequent allocations. After calling try_reserve
, capacity will be greater than or equal to self.len() + additional
if it returns Ok(())
. Does nothing if capacity is already sufficient. This method preserves the contents even if an error occurs.
Errors
If the capacity overflows, or the allocator reports a failure, then an error is returned.
Examples
use std::collections::TryReserveError;
fn process_data(data: &str) -> Result<String, TryReserveError> {
let mut output = String::new();
// Pre-reserve the memory, exiting if we can't
output.try_reserve(data.len())?;
// Now we know this can't OOM in the middle of our complex work
output.push_str(data);
Ok(output)
}
pub fn try_reserve_exact(
&mut self,
additional: usize
) -> Result<(), TryReserveError>
Tries to reserve the minimum capacity for at least additional
bytes more than the current length. Unlike try_reserve
, this will not deliberately over-allocate to speculatively avoid frequent allocations. After calling try_reserve_exact
, capacity will be greater than or equal to self.len() + additional
if it returns Ok(())
. Does nothing if the capacity is already sufficient.
Note that the allocator may give the collection more space than it requests. Therefore, capacity can not be relied upon to be precisely minimal. Prefer try_reserve
if future insertions are expected.
Errors
If the capacity overflows, or the allocator reports a failure, then an error is returned.
Examples
use std::collections::TryReserveError;
fn process_data(data: &str) -> Result<String, TryReserveError> {
let mut output = String::new();
// Pre-reserve the memory, exiting if we can't
output.try_reserve_exact(data.len())?;
// Now we know this can't OOM in the middle of our complex work
output.push_str(data);
Ok(output)
}
pub fn shrink_to_fit(&mut self)
Shrinks the capacity of this String
to match its length.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("foo");
s.reserve(100);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 100);
s.shrink_to_fit();
assert_eq!(3, s.capacity());
pub fn shrink_to(&mut self, min_capacity: usize)
Shrinks the capacity of this String
with a lower bound.
The capacity will remain at least as large as both the length and the supplied value.
If the current capacity is less than the lower limit, this is a no-op.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("foo");
s.reserve(100);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 100);
s.shrink_to(10);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 10);
s.shrink_to(0);
assert!(s.capacity() >= 3);
pub fn push(&mut self, ch: char)
Appends the given char
to the end of this String
.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("abc");
s.push('1');
s.push('2');
s.push('3');
assert_eq!("abc123", s);
pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[u8] ⓘ
Returns a byte slice of this String
’s contents.
The inverse of this method is from_utf8
.
Examples
let s = String::from("hello");
assert_eq!(&[104, 101, 108, 108, 111], s.as_bytes());
pub fn truncate(&mut self, new_len: usize)
Shortens this String
to the specified length.
If new_len
is greater than the string’s current length, this has no effect.
Note that this method has no effect on the allocated capacity of the string
Panics
Panics if new_len
does not lie on a char
boundary.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("hello");
s.truncate(2);
assert_eq!("he", s);
pub fn pop(&mut self) -> Option<char>
Removes the last character from the string buffer and returns it.
Returns None
if this String
is empty.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("abč");
assert_eq!(s.pop(), Some('č'));
assert_eq!(s.pop(), Some('b'));
assert_eq!(s.pop(), Some('a'));
assert_eq!(s.pop(), None);
pub fn remove(&mut self, idx: usize) -> char
Removes a char
from this String
at a byte position and returns it.
This is an O(n) operation, as it requires copying every element in the buffer.
Panics
Panics if idx
is larger than or equal to the String
’s length, or if it does not lie on a char
boundary.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("abç");
assert_eq!(s.remove(0), 'a');
assert_eq!(s.remove(1), 'ç');
assert_eq!(s.remove(0), 'b');
pub fn remove_matches<P, 'a>(&'a mut self, pat: P)
where
P: for<'x> Pattern<'x>,
string_remove_matches
#72826)
Remove all matches of pattern pat
in the String
.
Examples
#![feature(string_remove_matches)]
let mut s = String::from("Trees are not green, the sky is not blue.");
s.remove_matches("not ");
assert_eq!("Trees are green, the sky is blue.", s);
Matches will be detected and removed iteratively, so in cases where patterns overlap, only the first pattern will be removed:
#![feature(string_remove_matches)]
let mut s = String::from("banana");
s.remove_matches("ana");
assert_eq!("bna", s);
pub fn retain<F>(&mut self, f: F)
where
F: FnMut(char) -> bool,
Retains only the characters specified by the predicate.
In other words, remove all characters c
such that f(c)
returns false
. This method operates in place, visiting each character exactly once in the original order, and preserves the order of the retained characters.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("f_o_ob_ar");
s.retain(|c| c != '_');
assert_eq!(s, "foobar");
Because the elements are visited exactly once in the original order, external state may be used to decide which elements to keep.
let mut s = String::from("abcde");
let keep = [false, true, true, false, true];
let mut iter = keep.iter();
s.retain(|_| *iter.next().unwrap());
assert_eq!(s, "bce");
pub fn insert(&mut self, idx: usize, ch: char)
Inserts a character into this String
at a byte position.
This is an O(n) operation as it requires copying every element in the buffer.
Panics
Panics if idx
is larger than the String
’s length, or if it does not lie on a char
boundary.
Examples
let mut s = String::with_capacity(3);
s.insert(0, 'f');
s.insert(1, 'o');
s.insert(2, 'o');
assert_eq!("foo", s);
pub fn insert_str(&mut self, idx: usize, string: &str)
Inserts a string slice into this String
at a byte position.
This is an O(n) operation as it requires copying every element in the buffer.
Panics
Panics if idx
is larger than the String
’s length, or if it does not lie on a char
boundary.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("bar");
s.insert_str(0, "foo");
assert_eq!("foobar", s);
pub unsafe fn as_mut_vec(&mut self) -> &mut Vec<u8> ⓘ
Returns a mutable reference to the contents of this String
.
Safety
This function is unsafe because the returned &mut Vec
allows writing bytes which are not valid UTF-8. If this constraint is violated, using the original String
after dropping the &mut Vec
may violate memory safety, as the rest of the standard library assumes that String
s are valid UTF-8.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("hello");
unsafe {
let vec = s.as_mut_vec();
assert_eq!(&[104, 101, 108, 108, 111][..], &vec[..]);
vec.reverse();
}
assert_eq!(s, "olleh");
pub fn len(&self) -> usize
Returns the length of this String
, in bytes, not char
s or graphemes. In other words, it might not be what a human considers the length of the string.
Examples
let a = String::from("foo");
assert_eq!(a.len(), 3);
let fancy_f = String::from("ƒoo");
assert_eq!(fancy_f.len(), 4);
assert_eq!(fancy_f.chars().count(), 3);
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool
Returns true
if this String
has a length of zero, and false
otherwise.
Examples
let mut v = String::new();
assert!(v.is_empty());
v.push('a');
assert!(!v.is_empty());
pub fn split_off(&mut self, at: usize) -> String
Splits the string into two at the given byte index.
Returns a newly allocated String
. self
contains bytes [0, at)
, and the returned String
contains bytes [at, len)
. at
must be on the boundary of a UTF-8 code point.
Note that the capacity of self
does not change.
Panics
Panics if at
is not on a UTF-8
code point boundary, or if it is beyond the last code point of the string.
Examples
let mut hello = String::from("Hello, World!");
let world = hello.split_off(7);
assert_eq!(hello, "Hello, ");
assert_eq!(world, "World!");
pub fn clear(&mut self)
Truncates this String
, removing all contents.
While this means the String
will have a length of zero, it does not touch its capacity.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("foo");
s.clear();
assert!(s.is_empty());
assert_eq!(0, s.len());
assert_eq!(3, s.capacity());
pub fn drain<R>(&mut self, range: R) -> Drain<'_> ⓘ
where
R: RangeBounds<usize>,
Removes the specified range from the string in bulk, returning all removed characters as an iterator.
The returned iterator keeps a mutable borrow on the string to optimize its implementation.
Panics
Panics if the starting point or end point do not lie on a char
boundary, or if they’re out of bounds.
Leaking
If the returned iterator goes out of scope without being dropped (due to core::mem::forget
, for example), the string may still contain a copy of any drained characters, or may have lost characters arbitrarily, including characters outside the range.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("α is alpha, β is beta");
let beta_offset = s.find('β').unwrap_or(s.len());
// Remove the range up until the β from the string
let t: String = s.drain(..beta_offset).collect();
assert_eq!(t, "α is alpha, ");
assert_eq!(s, "β is beta");
// A full range clears the string, like `clear()` does
s.drain(..);
assert_eq!(s, "");
pub fn replace_range<R>(&mut self, range: R, replace_with: &str)
where
R: RangeBounds<usize>,
Removes the specified range in the string, and replaces it with the given string. The given string doesn’t need to be the same length as the range.
Panics
Panics if the starting point or end point do not lie on a char
boundary, or if they’re out of bounds.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("α is alpha, β is beta");
let beta_offset = s.find('β').unwrap_or(s.len());
// Replace the range up until the β from the string
s.replace_range(..beta_offset, "Α is capital alpha; ");
assert_eq!(s, "Α is capital alpha; β is beta");
pub fn into_boxed_str(self) -> Box<str>
Converts this String
into a Box<str>
.
This will drop any excess capacity.
Examples
let s = String::from("hello");
let b = s.into_boxed_str();
pub fn leak<'a>(self) -> &'a mut str
Consumes and leaks the String
, returning a mutable reference to the contents, &'a mut str
.
The caller has free choice over the returned lifetime, including 'static
. Indeed, this function is ideally used for data that lives for the remainder of the program’s life, as dropping the returned reference will cause a memory leak.
It does not reallocate or shrink the String
, so the leaked allocation may include unused capacity that is not part of the returned slice. If you don’t want that, call into_boxed_str
, and then Box::leak
.
Examples
let x = String::from("bucket");
let static_ref: &'static mut str = x.leak();
assert_eq!(static_ref, "bucket");
Methods from Deref<Target = str>
pub fn len(&self) -> usize
Returns the length of self
.
This length is in bytes, not char
s or graphemes. In other words, it might not be what a human considers the length of the string.
Examples
let len = "foo".len();
assert_eq!(3, len);
assert_eq!("ƒoo".len(), 4); // fancy f!
assert_eq!("ƒoo".chars().count(), 3);
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool
Returns true
if self
has a length of zero bytes.
Examples
let s = "";
assert!(s.is_empty());
let s = "not empty";
assert!(!s.is_empty());
pub fn is_char_boundary(&self, index: usize) -> bool
Checks that index
-th byte is the first byte in a UTF-8 code point sequence or the end of the string.
The start and end of the string (when index == self.len()
) are considered to be boundaries.
Returns false
if index
is greater than self.len()
.
Examples
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
assert!(s.is_char_boundary(0));
// start of `老`
assert!(s.is_char_boundary(6));
assert!(s.is_char_boundary(s.len()));
// second byte of `ö`
assert!(!s.is_char_boundary(2));
// third byte of `老`
assert!(!s.is_char_boundary(8));
pub fn floor_char_boundary(&self, index: usize) -> usize
round_char_boundary
#93743)
Finds the closest x
not exceeding index
where is_char_boundary(x)
is true
.
This method can help you truncate a string so that it’s still valid UTF-8, but doesn’t exceed a given number of bytes. Note that this is done purely at the character level and can still visually split graphemes, even though the underlying characters aren’t split. For example, the emoji 🧑🔬 (scientist) could be split so that the string only includes 🧑 (person) instead.
Examples
#![feature(round_char_boundary)]
let s = "❤️🧡💛💚💙💜";
assert_eq!(s.len(), 26);
assert!(!s.is_char_boundary(13));
let closest = s.floor_char_boundary(13);
assert_eq!(closest, 10);
assert_eq!(&s[..closest], "❤️🧡");
pub fn ceil_char_boundary(&self, index: usize) -> usize
round_char_boundary
#93743)
Finds the closest x
not below index
where is_char_boundary(x)
is true
.
If index
is greater than the length of the string, this returns the length of the string.
This method is the natural complement to floor_char_boundary
. See that method for more details.
Examples
#![feature(round_char_boundary)]
let s = "❤️🧡💛💚💙💜";
assert_eq!(s.len(), 26);
assert!(!s.is_char_boundary(13));
let closest = s.ceil_char_boundary(13);
assert_eq!(closest, 14);
assert_eq!(&s[..closest], "❤️🧡💛");
pub fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[u8] ⓘ
Converts a string slice to a byte slice. To convert the byte slice back into a string slice, use the from_utf8
function.
Examples
let bytes = "bors".as_bytes();
assert_eq!(b"bors", bytes);
pub unsafe fn as_bytes_mut(&mut self) -> &mut [u8] ⓘ
Converts a mutable string slice to a mutable byte slice.
Safety
The caller must ensure that the content of the slice is valid UTF-8 before the borrow ends and the underlying str
is used.
Use of a str
whose contents are not valid UTF-8 is undefined behavior.
Examples
Basic usage:
let mut s = String::from("Hello");
let bytes = unsafe { s.as_bytes_mut() };
assert_eq!(b"Hello", bytes);
Mutability:
let mut s = String::from("🗻∈🌏");
unsafe {
let bytes = s.as_bytes_mut();
bytes[0] = 0xF0;
bytes[1] = 0x9F;
bytes[2] = 0x8D;
bytes[3] = 0x94;
}
assert_eq!("🍔∈🌏", s);
pub fn as_ptr(&self) -> *const u8
Converts a string slice to a raw pointer.
As string slices are a slice of bytes, the raw pointer points to a u8
. This pointer will be pointing to the first byte of the string slice.
The caller must ensure that the returned pointer is never written to. If you need to mutate the contents of the string slice, use as_mut_ptr
.
Examples
let s = "Hello";
let ptr = s.as_ptr();
pub fn as_mut_ptr(&mut self) -> *mut u8
Converts a mutable string slice to a raw pointer.
As string slices are a slice of bytes, the raw pointer points to a u8
. This pointer will be pointing to the first byte of the string slice.
It is your responsibility to make sure that the string slice only gets modified in a way that it remains valid UTF-8.
pub fn get<I>(&self, i: I) -> Option<&<I as SliceIndex<str>>::Output>
where
I: SliceIndex<str>,
Returns a subslice of str
.
This is the non-panicking alternative to indexing the str
. Returns None
whenever equivalent indexing operation would panic.
Examples
let v = String::from("🗻∈🌏");
assert_eq!(Some("🗻"), v.get(0..4));
// indices not on UTF-8 sequence boundaries
assert!(v.get(1..).is_none());
assert!(v.get(..8).is_none());
// out of bounds
assert!(v.get(..42).is_none());
pub fn get_mut<I>(
&mut self,
i: I
) -> Option<&mut <I as SliceIndex<str>>::Output>
where
I: SliceIndex<str>,
Returns a mutable subslice of str
.
This is the non-panicking alternative to indexing the str
. Returns None
whenever equivalent indexing operation would panic.
Examples
let mut v = String::from("hello");
// correct length
assert!(v.get_mut(0..5).is_some());
// out of bounds
assert!(v.get_mut(..42).is_none());
assert_eq!(Some("he"), v.get_mut(0..2).map(|v| &*v));
assert_eq!("hello", v);
{
let s = v.get_mut(0..2);
let s = s.map(|s| {
s.make_ascii_uppercase();
&*s
});
assert_eq!(Some("HE"), s);
}
assert_eq!("HEllo", v);
pub unsafe fn get_unchecked<I>(&self, i: I) -> &<I as SliceIndex<str>>::Output
where
I: SliceIndex<str>,
Returns an unchecked subslice of str
.
This is the unchecked alternative to indexing the str
.
Safety
Callers of this function are responsible that these preconditions are satisfied:
- The starting index must not exceed the ending index;
- Indexes must be within bounds of the original slice;
- Indexes must lie on UTF-8 sequence boundaries.
Failing that, the returned string slice may reference invalid memory or violate the invariants communicated by the str
type.
Examples
let v = "🗻∈🌏";
unsafe {
assert_eq!("🗻", v.get_unchecked(0..4));
assert_eq!("∈", v.get_unchecked(4..7));
assert_eq!("🌏", v.get_unchecked(7..11));
}
pub unsafe fn get_unchecked_mut<I>(
&mut self,
i: I
) -> &mut <I as SliceIndex<str>>::Output
where
I: SliceIndex<str>,
Returns a mutable, unchecked subslice of str
.
This is the unchecked alternative to indexing the str
.
Safety
Callers of this function are responsible that these preconditions are satisfied:
- The starting index must not exceed the ending index;
- Indexes must be within bounds of the original slice;
- Indexes must lie on UTF-8 sequence boundaries.
Failing that, the returned string slice may reference invalid memory or violate the invariants communicated by the str
type.
Examples
let mut v = String::from("🗻∈🌏");
unsafe {
assert_eq!("🗻", v.get_unchecked_mut(0..4));
assert_eq!("∈", v.get_unchecked_mut(4..7));
assert_eq!("🌏", v.get_unchecked_mut(7..11));
}
pub unsafe fn slice_unchecked(&self, begin: usize, end: usize) -> &str
get_unchecked(begin..end)
instead
Creates a string slice from another string slice, bypassing safety checks.
This is generally not recommended, use with caution! For a safe alternative see str
and Index
.
This new slice goes from begin
to end
, including begin
but excluding end
.
To get a mutable string slice instead, see the slice_mut_unchecked
method.
Safety
Callers of this function are responsible that three preconditions are satisfied:
begin
must not exceedend
.begin
andend
must be byte positions within the string slice.begin
andend
must lie on UTF-8 sequence boundaries.
Examples
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
unsafe {
assert_eq!("Löwe 老虎 Léopard", s.slice_unchecked(0, 21));
}
let s = "Hello, world!";
unsafe {
assert_eq!("world", s.slice_unchecked(7, 12));
}
pub unsafe fn slice_mut_unchecked(
&mut self,
begin: usize,
end: usize
) -> &mut str
get_unchecked_mut(begin..end)
instead
Creates a string slice from another string slice, bypassing safety checks. This is generally not recommended, use with caution! For a safe alternative see str
and IndexMut
.
This new slice goes from begin
to end
, including begin
but excluding end
.
To get an immutable string slice instead, see the slice_unchecked
method.
Safety
Callers of this function are responsible that three preconditions are satisfied:
begin
must not exceedend
.begin
andend
must be byte positions within the string slice.begin
andend
must lie on UTF-8 sequence boundaries.
pub fn split_at(&self, mid: usize) -> (&str, &str)
Divide one string slice into two at an index.
The argument, mid
, should be a byte offset from the start of the string. It must also be on the boundary of a UTF-8 code point.
The two slices returned go from the start of the string slice to mid
, and from mid
to the end of the string slice.
To get mutable string slices instead, see the split_at_mut
method.
Panics
Panics if mid
is not on a UTF-8 code point boundary, or if it is past the end of the last code point of the string slice.
Examples
let s = "Per Martin-Löf";
let (first, last) = s.split_at(3);
assert_eq!("Per", first);
assert_eq!(" Martin-Löf", last);
pub fn split_at_mut(&mut self, mid: usize) -> (&mut str, &mut str)
Divide one mutable string slice into two at an index.
The argument, mid
, should be a byte offset from the start of the string. It must also be on the boundary of a UTF-8 code point.
The two slices returned go from the start of the string slice to mid
, and from mid
to the end of the string slice.
To get immutable string slices instead, see the split_at
method.
Panics
Panics if mid
is not on a UTF-8 code point boundary, or if it is past the end of the last code point of the string slice.
Examples
let mut s = "Per Martin-Löf".to_string();
{
let (first, last) = s.split_at_mut(3);
first.make_ascii_uppercase();
assert_eq!("PER", first);
assert_eq!(" Martin-Löf", last);
}
assert_eq!("PER Martin-Löf", s);
pub fn chars(&self) -> Chars<'_> ⓘ
Returns an iterator over the char
s of a string slice.
As a string slice consists of valid UTF-8, we can iterate through a string slice by char
. This method returns such an iterator.
It’s important to remember that char
represents a Unicode Scalar Value, and might not match your idea of what a ‘character’ is. Iteration over grapheme clusters may be what you actually want. This functionality is not provided by Rust’s standard library, check crates.io instead.
Examples
Basic usage:
let word = "goodbye";
let count = word.chars().count();
assert_eq!(7, count);
let mut chars = word.chars();
assert_eq!(Some('g'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(Some('o'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(Some('o'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(Some('d'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(Some('b'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(Some('y'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(Some('e'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(None, chars.next());
Remember, char
s might not match your intuition about characters:
let y = "y̆";
let mut chars = y.chars();
assert_eq!(Some('y'), chars.next()); // not 'y̆'
assert_eq!(Some('\u{0306}'), chars.next());
assert_eq!(None, chars.next());
pub fn char_indices(&self) -> CharIndices<'_> ⓘ
Returns an iterator over the char
s of a string slice, and their positions.
As a string slice consists of valid UTF-8, we can iterate through a string slice by char
. This method returns an iterator of both these char
s, as well as their byte positions.
The iterator yields tuples. The position is first, the char
is second.
Examples
Basic usage:
let word = "goodbye";
let count = word.char_indices().count();
assert_eq!(7, count);
let mut char_indices = word.char_indices();
assert_eq!(Some((0, 'g')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((1, 'o')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((2, 'o')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((3, 'd')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((4, 'b')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((5, 'y')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((6, 'e')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(None, char_indices.next());
Remember, char
s might not match your intuition about characters:
let yes = "y̆es";
let mut char_indices = yes.char_indices();
assert_eq!(Some((0, 'y')), char_indices.next()); // not (0, 'y̆')
assert_eq!(Some((1, '\u{0306}')), char_indices.next());
// note the 3 here - the previous character took up two bytes
assert_eq!(Some((3, 'e')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(Some((4, 's')), char_indices.next());
assert_eq!(None, char_indices.next());
pub fn bytes(&self) -> Bytes<'_> ⓘ
An iterator over the bytes of a string slice.
As a string slice consists of a sequence of bytes, we can iterate through a string slice by byte. This method returns such an iterator.
Examples
let mut bytes = "bors".bytes();
assert_eq!(Some(b'b'), bytes.next());
assert_eq!(Some(b'o'), bytes.next());
assert_eq!(Some(b'r'), bytes.next());
assert_eq!(Some(b's'), bytes.next());
assert_eq!(None, bytes.next());
pub fn split_whitespace(&self) -> SplitWhitespace<'_> ⓘ
Splits a string slice by whitespace.
The iterator returned will return string slices that are sub-slices of the original string slice, separated by any amount of whitespace.
‘Whitespace’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property White_Space
. If you only want to split on ASCII whitespace instead, use split_ascii_whitespace
.
Examples
Basic usage:
let mut iter = "A few words".split_whitespace();
assert_eq!(Some("A"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("few"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("words"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(None, iter.next());
All kinds of whitespace are considered:
let mut iter = " Mary had\ta\u{2009}little \n\t lamb".split_whitespace();
assert_eq!(Some("Mary"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("had"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("a"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("little"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("lamb"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(None, iter.next());
If the string is empty or all whitespace, the iterator yields no string slices:
assert_eq!("".split_whitespace().next(), None);
assert_eq!(" ".split_whitespace().next(), None);
pub fn split_ascii_whitespace(&self) -> SplitAsciiWhitespace<'_> ⓘ
Splits a string slice by ASCII whitespace.
The iterator returned will return string slices that are sub-slices of the original string slice, separated by any amount of ASCII whitespace.
To split by Unicode Whitespace
instead, use split_whitespace
.
Examples
Basic usage:
let mut iter = "A few words".split_ascii_whitespace();
assert_eq!(Some("A"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("few"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("words"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(None, iter.next());
All kinds of ASCII whitespace are considered:
let mut iter = " Mary had\ta little \n\t lamb".split_ascii_whitespace();
assert_eq!(Some("Mary"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("had"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("a"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("little"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(Some("lamb"), iter.next());
assert_eq!(None, iter.next());
If the string is empty or all ASCII whitespace, the iterator yields no string slices:
assert_eq!("".split_ascii_whitespace().next(), None);
assert_eq!(" ".split_ascii_whitespace().next(), None);
pub fn lines(&self) -> Lines<'_> ⓘ
An iterator over the lines of a string, as string slices.
Lines are split at line endings that are either newlines (\n
) or sequences of a carriage return followed by a line feed (\r\n
).
Line terminators are not included in the lines returned by the iterator.
Note that any carriage return (\r
) not immediately followed by a line feed (\n
) does not split a line. These carriage returns are thereby included in the produced lines.
The final line ending is optional. A string that ends with a final line ending will return the same lines as an otherwise identical string without a final line ending.
Examples
Basic usage:
let text = "foo\r\nbar\n\nbaz\r";
let mut lines = text.lines();
assert_eq!(Some("foo"), lines.next());
assert_eq!(Some("bar"), lines.next());
assert_eq!(Some(""), lines.next());
// Trailing carriage return is included in the last line
assert_eq!(Some("baz\r"), lines.next());
assert_eq!(None, lines.next());
The final line does not require any ending:
let text = "foo\nbar\n\r\nbaz";
let mut lines = text.lines();
assert_eq!(Some("foo"), lines.next());
assert_eq!(Some("bar"), lines.next());
assert_eq!(Some(""), lines.next());
assert_eq!(Some("baz"), lines.next());
assert_eq!(None, lines.next());
pub fn lines_any(&self) -> LinesAny<'_> ⓘ
An iterator over the lines of a string.
pub fn encode_utf16(&self) -> EncodeUtf16<'_> ⓘ
Returns an iterator of u16
over the string encoded as UTF-16.
Examples
let text = "Zażółć gęślą jaźń";
let utf8_len = text.len();
let utf16_len = text.encode_utf16().count();
assert!(utf16_len <= utf8_len);
pub fn contains<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> bool
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Returns true
if the given pattern matches a sub-slice of this string slice.
Returns false
if it does not.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
let bananas = "bananas";
assert!(bananas.contains("nana"));
assert!(!bananas.contains("apples"));
pub fn starts_with<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> bool
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Returns true
if the given pattern matches a prefix of this string slice.
Returns false
if it does not.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
let bananas = "bananas";
assert!(bananas.starts_with("bana"));
assert!(!bananas.starts_with("nana"));
pub fn ends_with<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> bool
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
Returns true
if the given pattern matches a suffix of this string slice.
Returns false
if it does not.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
let bananas = "bananas";
assert!(bananas.ends_with("anas"));
assert!(!bananas.ends_with("nana"));
pub fn find<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Option<usize>
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Returns the byte index of the first character of this string slice that matches the pattern.
Returns None
if the pattern doesn’t match.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
Simple patterns:
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard Gepardi";
assert_eq!(s.find('L'), Some(0));
assert_eq!(s.find('é'), Some(14));
assert_eq!(s.find("pard"), Some(17));
More complex patterns using point-free style and closures:
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
assert_eq!(s.find(char::is_whitespace), Some(5));
assert_eq!(s.find(char::is_lowercase), Some(1));
assert_eq!(s.find(|c: char| c.is_whitespace() || c.is_lowercase()), Some(1));
assert_eq!(s.find(|c: char| (c < 'o') && (c > 'a')), Some(4));
Not finding the pattern:
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!(s.find(x), None);
pub fn rfind<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Option<usize>
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
Returns the byte index for the first character of the last match of the pattern in this string slice.
Returns None
if the pattern doesn’t match.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
Simple patterns:
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard Gepardi";
assert_eq!(s.rfind('L'), Some(13));
assert_eq!(s.rfind('é'), Some(14));
assert_eq!(s.rfind("pard"), Some(24));
More complex patterns with closures:
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
assert_eq!(s.rfind(char::is_whitespace), Some(12));
assert_eq!(s.rfind(char::is_lowercase), Some(20));
Not finding the pattern:
let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!(s.rfind(x), None);
pub fn split<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Split<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of this string slice, separated by characters matched by a pattern.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, e.g., char
, but not for &str
.
If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, the rsplit
method can be used.
Examples
Simple patterns:
let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb".split(' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["Mary", "had", "a", "little", "lamb"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "".split('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, [""]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".split('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "", "tiger", "leopard"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lion::tiger::leopard".split("::").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "tiger", "leopard"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1def2ghi".split(char::is_numeric).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "def", "ghi"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXtigerXleopard".split(char::is_uppercase).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "tiger", "leopard"]);
If the pattern is a slice of chars, split on each occurrence of any of the characters:
let v: Vec<&str> = "2020-11-03 23:59".split(&['-', ' ', ':', '@'][..]).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["2020", "11", "03", "23", "59"]);
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".split(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "def", "ghi"]);
If a string contains multiple contiguous separators, you will end up with empty strings in the output:
let x = "||||a||b|c".to_string();
let d: Vec<_> = x.split('|').collect();
assert_eq!(d, &["", "", "", "", "a", "", "b", "c"]);
Contiguous separators are separated by the empty string.
let x = "(///)".to_string();
let d: Vec<_> = x.split('/').collect();
assert_eq!(d, &["(", "", "", ")"]);
Separators at the start or end of a string are neighbored by empty strings.
let d: Vec<_> = "010".split("0").collect();
assert_eq!(d, &["", "1", ""]);
When the empty string is used as a separator, it separates every character in the string, along with the beginning and end of the string.
let f: Vec<_> = "rust".split("").collect();
assert_eq!(f, &["", "r", "u", "s", "t", ""]);
Contiguous separators can lead to possibly surprising behavior when whitespace is used as the separator. This code is correct:
let x = " a b c".to_string();
let d: Vec<_> = x.split(' ').collect();
assert_eq!(d, &["", "", "", "", "a", "", "b", "c"]);
It does not give you:
assert_eq!(d, &["a", "b", "c"]);
Use split_whitespace
for this behavior.
pub fn split_inclusive<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> SplitInclusive<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of this string slice, separated by characters matched by a pattern. Differs from the iterator produced by split
in that split_inclusive
leaves the matched part as the terminator of the substring.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb\nlittle lamb\nlittle lamb."
.split_inclusive('\n').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["Mary had a little lamb\n", "little lamb\n", "little lamb."]);
If the last element of the string is matched, that element will be considered the terminator of the preceding substring. That substring will be the last item returned by the iterator.
let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb\nlittle lamb\nlittle lamb.\n"
.split_inclusive('\n').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["Mary had a little lamb\n", "little lamb\n", "little lamb.\n"]);
pub fn rsplit<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RSplit<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of the given string slice, separated by characters matched by a pattern and yielded in reverse order.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.
For iterating from the front, the split
method can be used.
Examples
Simple patterns:
let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb".rsplit(' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lamb", "little", "a", "had", "Mary"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "".rsplit('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, [""]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".rsplit('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "tiger", "", "lion"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lion::tiger::leopard".rsplit("::").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "tiger", "lion"]);
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".rsplit(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["ghi", "def", "abc"]);
pub fn split_terminator<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> SplitTerminator<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of the given string slice, separated by characters matched by a pattern.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Equivalent to split
, except that the trailing substring is skipped if empty.
This method can be used for string data that is terminated, rather than separated by a pattern.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, e.g., char
, but not for &str
.
If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, the rsplit_terminator
method can be used.
Examples
let v: Vec<&str> = "A.B.".split_terminator('.').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["A", "B"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "A..B..".split_terminator(".").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["A", "", "B", ""]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "A.B:C.D".split_terminator(&['.', ':'][..]).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["A", "B", "C", "D"]);
pub fn rsplit_terminator<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RSplitTerminator<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of self
, separated by characters matched by a pattern and yielded in reverse order.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Equivalent to split
, except that the trailing substring is skipped if empty.
This method can be used for string data that is terminated, rather than separated by a pattern.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be double ended if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.
For iterating from the front, the split_terminator
method can be used.
Examples
let v: Vec<&str> = "A.B.".rsplit_terminator('.').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["B", "A"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "A..B..".rsplit_terminator(".").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["", "B", "", "A"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "A.B:C.D".rsplit_terminator(&['.', ':'][..]).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["D", "C", "B", "A"]);
pub fn splitn<'a, P>(&'a self, n: usize, pat: P) -> SplitN<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of the given string slice, separated by a pattern, restricted to returning at most n
items.
If n
substrings are returned, the last substring (the n
th substring) will contain the remainder of the string.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator will not be double ended, because it is not efficient to support.
If the pattern allows a reverse search, the rsplitn
method can be used.
Examples
Simple patterns:
let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lambda".splitn(3, ' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["Mary", "had", "a little lambda"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".splitn(3, "X").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "", "tigerXleopard"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "abcXdef".splitn(1, 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abcXdef"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "".splitn(1, 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, [""]);
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".splitn(2, |c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "defXghi"]);
pub fn rsplitn<'a, P>(&'a self, n: usize, pat: P) -> RSplitN<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
An iterator over substrings of this string slice, separated by a pattern, starting from the end of the string, restricted to returning at most n
items.
If n
substrings are returned, the last substring (the n
th substring) will contain the remainder of the string.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator will not be double ended, because it is not efficient to support.
For splitting from the front, the splitn
method can be used.
Examples
Simple patterns:
let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb".rsplitn(3, ' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lamb", "little", "Mary had a"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".rsplitn(3, 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "tiger", "lionX"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "lion::tiger::leopard".rsplitn(2, "::").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "lion::tiger"]);
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".rsplitn(2, |c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["ghi", "abc1def"]);
pub fn split_once<'a, P>(&'a self, delimiter: P) -> Option<(&'a str, &'a str)>
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Splits the string on the first occurrence of the specified delimiter and returns prefix before delimiter and suffix after delimiter.
Examples
assert_eq!("cfg".split_once('='), None);
assert_eq!("cfg=".split_once('='), Some(("cfg", "")));
assert_eq!("cfg=foo".split_once('='), Some(("cfg", "foo")));
assert_eq!("cfg=foo=bar".split_once('='), Some(("cfg", "foo=bar")));
pub fn rsplit_once<'a, P>(&'a self, delimiter: P) -> Option<(&'a str, &'a str)>
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
Splits the string on the last occurrence of the specified delimiter and returns prefix before delimiter and suffix after delimiter.
Examples
assert_eq!("cfg".rsplit_once('='), None);
assert_eq!("cfg=foo".rsplit_once('='), Some(("cfg", "foo")));
assert_eq!("cfg=foo=bar".rsplit_once('='), Some(("cfg=foo", "bar")));
pub fn matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Matches<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
An iterator over the disjoint matches of a pattern within the given string slice.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, e.g., char
, but not for &str
.
If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, the rmatches
method can be used.
Examples
let v: Vec<&str> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".matches("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "abc", "abc"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "1abc2abc3".matches(char::is_numeric).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["1", "2", "3"]);
pub fn rmatches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RMatches<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
An iterator over the disjoint matches of a pattern within this string slice, yielded in reverse order.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.
For iterating from the front, the matches
method can be used.
Examples
let v: Vec<&str> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".rmatches("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "abc", "abc"]);
let v: Vec<&str> = "1abc2abc3".rmatches(char::is_numeric).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["3", "2", "1"]);
pub fn match_indices<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> MatchIndices<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
An iterator over the disjoint matches of a pattern within this string slice as well as the index that the match starts at.
For matches of pat
within self
that overlap, only the indices corresponding to the first match are returned.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, e.g., char
, but not for &str
.
If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, the rmatch_indices
method can be used.
Examples
let v: Vec<_> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".match_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(0, "abc"), (6, "abc"), (12, "abc")]);
let v: Vec<_> = "1abcabc2".match_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(1, "abc"), (4, "abc")]);
let v: Vec<_> = "ababa".match_indices("aba").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(0, "aba")]); // only the first `aba`
pub fn rmatch_indices<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RMatchIndices<'a, P> ⓘ
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
An iterator over the disjoint matches of a pattern within self
, yielded in reverse order along with the index of the match.
For matches of pat
within self
that overlap, only the indices corresponding to the last match are returned.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Iterator behavior
The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be a DoubleEndedIterator
if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.
For iterating from the front, the match_indices
method can be used.
Examples
let v: Vec<_> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".rmatch_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(12, "abc"), (6, "abc"), (0, "abc")]);
let v: Vec<_> = "1abcabc2".rmatch_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(4, "abc"), (1, "abc")]);
let v: Vec<_> = "ababa".rmatch_indices("aba").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(2, "aba")]); // only the last `aba`
pub fn trim(&self) -> &str
Returns a string slice with leading and trailing whitespace removed.
‘Whitespace’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property White_Space
, which includes newlines.
Examples
let s = "\n Hello\tworld\t\n";
assert_eq!("Hello\tworld", s.trim());
pub fn trim_start(&self) -> &str
Returns a string slice with leading whitespace removed.
‘Whitespace’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property White_Space
, which includes newlines.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. start
in this context means the first position of that byte string; for a left-to-right language like English or Russian, this will be left side, and for right-to-left languages like Arabic or Hebrew, this will be the right side.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = "\n Hello\tworld\t\n";
assert_eq!("Hello\tworld\t\n", s.trim_start());
Directionality:
let s = " English ";
assert!(Some('E') == s.trim_start().chars().next());
let s = " עברית ";
assert!(Some('ע') == s.trim_start().chars().next());
pub fn trim_end(&self) -> &str
Returns a string slice with trailing whitespace removed.
‘Whitespace’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property White_Space
, which includes newlines.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. end
in this context means the last position of that byte string; for a left-to-right language like English or Russian, this will be right side, and for right-to-left languages like Arabic or Hebrew, this will be the left side.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = "\n Hello\tworld\t\n";
assert_eq!("\n Hello\tworld", s.trim_end());
Directionality:
let s = " English ";
assert!(Some('h') == s.trim_end().chars().rev().next());
let s = " עברית ";
assert!(Some('ת') == s.trim_end().chars().rev().next());
pub fn trim_left(&self) -> &str
trim_start
Returns a string slice with leading whitespace removed.
‘Whitespace’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property White_Space
.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. ‘Left’ in this context means the first position of that byte string; for a language like Arabic or Hebrew which are ‘right to left’ rather than ‘left to right’, this will be the right side, not the left.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = " Hello\tworld\t";
assert_eq!("Hello\tworld\t", s.trim_left());
Directionality:
let s = " English";
assert!(Some('E') == s.trim_left().chars().next());
let s = " עברית";
assert!(Some('ע') == s.trim_left().chars().next());
pub fn trim_right(&self) -> &str
trim_end
Returns a string slice with trailing whitespace removed.
‘Whitespace’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property White_Space
.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. ‘Right’ in this context means the last position of that byte string; for a language like Arabic or Hebrew which are ‘right to left’ rather than ‘left to right’, this will be the left side, not the right.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = " Hello\tworld\t";
assert_eq!(" Hello\tworld", s.trim_right());
Directionality:
let s = "English ";
assert!(Some('h') == s.trim_right().chars().rev().next());
let s = "עברית ";
assert!(Some('ת') == s.trim_right().chars().rev().next());
pub fn trim_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: DoubleEndedSearcher<'a>,
Returns a string slice with all prefixes and suffixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.
The pattern can be a char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
Simple patterns:
assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_matches('1'), "foo1bar");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_matches(char::is_numeric), "foo1bar");
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_matches(x), "foo1bar");
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
assert_eq!("1foo1barXX".trim_matches(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X'), "foo1bar");
pub fn trim_start_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Returns a string slice with all prefixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. start
in this context means the first position of that byte string; for a left-to-right language like English or Russian, this will be left side, and for right-to-left languages like Arabic or Hebrew, this will be the right side.
Examples
assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_start_matches('1'), "foo1bar11");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_start_matches(char::is_numeric), "foo1bar123");
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_start_matches(x), "foo1bar12");
pub fn strip_prefix<'a, P>(&'a self, prefix: P) -> Option<&'a str>
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Returns a string slice with the prefix removed.
If the string starts with the pattern prefix
, returns substring after the prefix, wrapped in Some
. Unlike trim_start_matches
, this method removes the prefix exactly once.
If the string does not start with prefix
, returns None
.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
assert_eq!("foo:bar".strip_prefix("foo:"), Some("bar"));
assert_eq!("foo:bar".strip_prefix("bar"), None);
assert_eq!("foofoo".strip_prefix("foo"), Some("foo"));
pub fn strip_suffix<'a, P>(&'a self, suffix: P) -> Option<&'a str>
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
Returns a string slice with the suffix removed.
If the string ends with the pattern suffix
, returns the substring before the suffix, wrapped in Some
. Unlike trim_end_matches
, this method removes the suffix exactly once.
If the string does not end with suffix
, returns None
.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Examples
assert_eq!("bar:foo".strip_suffix(":foo"), Some("bar"));
assert_eq!("bar:foo".strip_suffix("bar"), None);
assert_eq!("foofoo".strip_suffix("foo"), Some("foo"));
pub fn trim_end_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
Returns a string slice with all suffixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. end
in this context means the last position of that byte string; for a left-to-right language like English or Russian, this will be right side, and for right-to-left languages like Arabic or Hebrew, this will be the left side.
Examples
Simple patterns:
assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_end_matches('1'), "11foo1bar");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_end_matches(char::is_numeric), "123foo1bar");
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_end_matches(x), "12foo1bar");
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
assert_eq!("1fooX".trim_end_matches(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X'), "1foo");
pub fn trim_left_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
trim_start_matches
Returns a string slice with all prefixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. ‘Left’ in this context means the first position of that byte string; for a language like Arabic or Hebrew which are ‘right to left’ rather than ‘left to right’, this will be the right side, not the left.
Examples
assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_left_matches('1'), "foo1bar11");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_left_matches(char::is_numeric), "foo1bar123");
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_left_matches(x), "foo1bar12");
pub fn trim_right_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
<P as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>,
trim_end_matches
Returns a string slice with all suffixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.
The pattern can be a &str
, char
, a slice of char
s, or a function or closure that determines if a character matches.
Text directionality
A string is a sequence of bytes. ‘Right’ in this context means the last position of that byte string; for a language like Arabic or Hebrew which are ‘right to left’ rather than ‘left to right’, this will be the left side, not the right.
Examples
Simple patterns:
assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_right_matches('1'), "11foo1bar");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_right_matches(char::is_numeric), "123foo1bar");
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_right_matches(x), "12foo1bar");
A more complex pattern, using a closure:
assert_eq!("1fooX".trim_right_matches(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X'), "1foo");
pub fn parse<F>(&self) -> Result<F, <F as FromStr>::Err>
where
F: FromStr,
Parses this string slice into another type.
Because parse
is so general, it can cause problems with type inference. As such, parse
is one of the few times you’ll see the syntax affectionately known as the ‘turbofish’: ::<>
. This helps the inference algorithm understand specifically which type you’re trying to parse into.
parse
can parse into any type that implements the FromStr
trait.
Errors
Will return Err
if it’s not possible to parse this string slice into the desired type.
Examples
Basic usage
let four: u32 = "4".parse().unwrap();
assert_eq!(4, four);
Using the ‘turbofish’ instead of annotating four
:
let four = "4".parse::<u32>();
assert_eq!(Ok(4), four);
Failing to parse:
let nope = "j".parse::<u32>();
assert!(nope.is_err());
pub fn is_ascii(&self) -> bool
Checks if all characters in this string are within the ASCII range.
Examples
let ascii = "hello!\n";
let non_ascii = "Grüße, Jürgen ❤";
assert!(ascii.is_ascii());
assert!(!non_ascii.is_ascii());
pub fn as_ascii(&self) -> Option<&[AsciiChar]>
ascii_char
#110998)
If this string slice is_ascii
, returns it as a slice of ASCII characters, otherwise returns None
.
pub fn eq_ignore_ascii_case(&self, other: &str) -> bool
Checks that two strings are an ASCII case-insensitive match.
Same as to_ascii_lowercase(a) == to_ascii_lowercase(b)
, but without allocating and copying temporaries.
Examples
assert!("Ferris".eq_ignore_ascii_case("FERRIS"));
assert!("Ferrös".eq_ignore_ascii_case("FERRöS"));
assert!(!"Ferrös".eq_ignore_ascii_case("FERRÖS"));
pub fn make_ascii_uppercase(&mut self)
Converts this string to its ASCII upper case equivalent in-place.
ASCII letters ‘a’ to ‘z’ are mapped to ‘A’ to ‘Z’, but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
To return a new uppercased value without modifying the existing one, use to_ascii_uppercase()
.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("Grüße, Jürgen ❤");
s.make_ascii_uppercase();
assert_eq!("GRüßE, JüRGEN ❤", s);
pub fn make_ascii_lowercase(&mut self)
Converts this string to its ASCII lower case equivalent in-place.
ASCII letters ‘A’ to ‘Z’ are mapped to ‘a’ to ‘z’, but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
To return a new lowercased value without modifying the existing one, use to_ascii_lowercase()
.
Examples
let mut s = String::from("GRÜßE, JÜRGEN ❤");
s.make_ascii_lowercase();
assert_eq!("grÜße, jÜrgen ❤", s);
pub fn escape_debug(&self) -> EscapeDebug<'_> ⓘ
Return an iterator that escapes each char in self
with char::escape_debug
.
Note: only extended grapheme codepoints that begin the string will be escaped.
Examples
As an iterator:
for c in "❤\n!".escape_debug() {
print!("{c}");
}
println!();
Using println!
directly:
println!("{}", "❤\n!".escape_debug());
Both are equivalent to:
println!("❤\\n!");
Using to_string
:
assert_eq!("❤\n!".escape_debug().to_string(), "❤\\n!");
pub fn escape_default(&self) -> EscapeDefault<'_> ⓘ
Return an iterator that escapes each char in self
with char::escape_default
.
Examples
As an iterator:
for c in "❤\n!".escape_default() {
print!("{c}");
}
println!();
Using println!
directly:
println!("{}", "❤\n!".escape_default());
Both are equivalent to:
println!("\\u{{2764}}\\n!");
Using to_string
:
assert_eq!("❤\n!".escape_default().to_string(), "\\u{2764}\\n!");
pub fn escape_unicode(&self) -> EscapeUnicode<'_> ⓘ
Return an iterator that escapes each char in self
with char::escape_unicode
.
Examples
As an iterator:
for c in "❤\n!".escape_unicode() {
print!("{c}");
}
println!();
Using println!
directly:
println!("{}", "❤\n!".escape_unicode());
Both are equivalent to:
println!("\\u{{2764}}\\u{{a}}\\u{{21}}");
Using to_string
:
assert_eq!("❤\n!".escape_unicode().to_string(), "\\u{2764}\\u{a}\\u{21}");
pub fn replace<'a, P>(&'a self, from: P, to: &str) -> String
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Replaces all matches of a pattern with another string.
replace
creates a new String
, and copies the data from this string slice into it. While doing so, it attempts to find matches of a pattern. If it finds any, it replaces them with the replacement string slice.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = "this is old";
assert_eq!("this is new", s.replace("old", "new"));
assert_eq!("than an old", s.replace("is", "an"));
When the pattern doesn’t match, it returns this string slice as String
:
let s = "this is old";
assert_eq!(s, s.replace("cookie monster", "little lamb"));
pub fn replacen<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P, to: &str, count: usize) -> String
where
P: Pattern<'a>,
Replaces first N matches of a pattern with another string.
replacen
creates a new String
, and copies the data from this string slice into it. While doing so, it attempts to find matches of a pattern. If it finds any, it replaces them with the replacement string slice at most count
times.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = "foo foo 123 foo";
assert_eq!("new new 123 foo", s.replacen("foo", "new", 2));
assert_eq!("faa fao 123 foo", s.replacen('o', "a", 3));
assert_eq!("foo foo new23 foo", s.replacen(char::is_numeric, "new", 1));
When the pattern doesn’t match, it returns this string slice as String
:
let s = "this is old";
assert_eq!(s, s.replacen("cookie monster", "little lamb", 10));
pub fn to_lowercase(&self) -> String
Returns the lowercase equivalent of this string slice, as a new String
.
‘Lowercase’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property Lowercase
.
Since some characters can expand into multiple characters when changing the case, this function returns a String
instead of modifying the parameter in-place.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = "HELLO";
assert_eq!("hello", s.to_lowercase());
A tricky example, with sigma:
let sigma = "Σ";
assert_eq!("σ", sigma.to_lowercase());
// but at the end of a word, it's ς, not σ:
let odysseus = "ὈΔΥΣΣΕΎΣ";
assert_eq!("ὀδυσσεύς", odysseus.to_lowercase());
Languages without case are not changed:
let new_year = "农历新年";
assert_eq!(new_year, new_year.to_lowercase());
pub fn to_uppercase(&self) -> String
Returns the uppercase equivalent of this string slice, as a new String
.
‘Uppercase’ is defined according to the terms of the Unicode Derived Core Property Uppercase
.
Since some characters can expand into multiple characters when changing the case, this function returns a String
instead of modifying the parameter in-place.
Examples
Basic usage:
let s = "hello";
assert_eq!("HELLO", s.to_uppercase());
Scripts without case are not changed:
let new_year = "农历新年";
assert_eq!(new_year, new_year.to_uppercase());
One character can become multiple:
let s = "tschüß";
assert_eq!("TSCHÜSS", s.to_uppercase());
pub fn repeat(&self, n: usize) -> String
Creates a new String
by repeating a string n
times.
Panics
This function will panic if the capacity would overflow.
Examples
Basic usage:
assert_eq!("abc".repeat(4), String::from("abcabcabcabc"));
A panic upon overflow:
// this will panic at runtime
let huge = "0123456789abcdef".repeat(usize::MAX);
pub fn to_ascii_uppercase(&self) -> String
Returns a copy of this string where each character is mapped to its ASCII upper case equivalent.
ASCII letters ‘a’ to ‘z’ are mapped to ‘A’ to ‘Z’, but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
To uppercase the value in-place, use make_ascii_uppercase
.
To uppercase ASCII characters in addition to non-ASCII characters, use to_uppercase
.
Examples
let s = "Grüße, Jürgen ❤";
assert_eq!("GRüßE, JüRGEN ❤", s.to_ascii_uppercase());
pub fn to_ascii_lowercase(&self) -> String
Returns a copy of this string where each character is mapped to its ASCII lower case equivalent.
ASCII letters ‘A’ to ‘Z’ are mapped to ‘a’ to ‘z’, but non-ASCII letters are unchanged.
To lowercase the value in-place, use make_ascii_lowercase
.
To lowercase ASCII characters in addition to non-ASCII characters, use to_lowercase
.
Examples
let s = "Grüße, Jürgen ❤";
assert_eq!("grüße, jürgen ❤", s.to_ascii_lowercase());
Trait Implementations
impl Add<&str> for String
Implements the +
operator for concatenating two strings.
This consumes the String
on the left-hand side and re-uses its buffer (growing it if necessary). This is done to avoid allocating a new String
and copying the entire contents on every operation, which would lead to O(n^2) running time when building an n-byte string by repeated concatenation.
The string on the right-hand side is only borrowed; its contents are copied into the returned String
.
Examples
Concatenating two String
s takes the first by value and borrows the second:
let a = String::from("hello");
let b = String::from(" world");
let c = a + &b;
// `a` is moved and can no longer be used here.
If you want to keep using the first String
, you can clone it and append to the clone instead:
let a = String::from("hello");
let b = String::from(" world");
let c = a.clone() + &b;
// `a` is still valid here.
Concatenating &str
slices can be done by converting the first to a String
:
let a = "hello";
let b = " world";
let c = a.to_string() + b;
type Output = String
+
operator.
fn add(self, other: &str) -> String
+
operation. Read more
impl AddAssign<&str> for String
Implements the +=
operator for appending to a String
.
This has the same behavior as the push_str
method.
impl AsMut<str> for String
fn as_mut(&mut self) -> &mut str
impl AsRef<[u8]> for String
fn as_ref(&self) -> &[u8] ⓘ
impl AsRef<OsStr> for String
fn as_ref(&self) -> &OsStr
impl AsRef<Path> for String
fn as_ref(&self) -> &Path
impl AsRef<str> for String
fn as_ref(&self) -> &str
impl Borrow<str> for String
impl BorrowMut<str> for String
impl Clone for String
fn clone(&self) -> String
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &String)
source
. Read more
impl Debug for String
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result<(), Error>
impl Default for String
fn default() -> String
Creates an empty String
.
impl Deref for String
type Target = str
fn deref(&self) -> &str
impl DerefMut for String
fn deref_mut(&mut self) -> &mut str
impl Display for String
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter<'_>) -> Result<(), Error>
impl<'a> Extend<&'a char> for String
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = &'a char>,
fn extend_one(&mut self, _: &'a char)
extend_one
#72631)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one
#72631)
impl<'a> Extend<&'a str> for String
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = &'a str>,
fn extend_one(&mut self, s: &'a str)
extend_one
#72631)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one
#72631)
impl Extend<Box<str>> for String
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = Box<str>>,
fn extend_one(&mut self, item: A)
extend_one
#72631)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one
#72631)
impl<'a> Extend<Cow<'a, str>> for String
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = Cow<'a, str>>,
fn extend_one(&mut self, s: Cow<'a, str>)
extend_one
#72631)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one
#72631)
impl Extend<String> for String
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = String>,
fn extend_one(&mut self, s: String)
extend_one
#72631)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one
#72631)
impl Extend<char> for String
fn extend<I>(&mut self, iter: I)
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = char>,
fn extend_one(&mut self, c: char)
extend_one
#72631)
fn extend_reserve(&mut self, additional: usize)
extend_one
#72631)
impl<'a> From<&'a String> for Cow<'a, str>
fn from(s: &'a String) -> Cow<'a, str>
impl From<&String> for String
fn from(s: &String) -> String
Converts a &String
into a String
.
This clones s
and returns the clone.
impl From<&mut str> for String
fn from(s: &mut str) -> String
Converts a &mut str
into a String
.
The result is allocated on the heap.
impl From<&str> for String
fn from(s: &str) -> String
Converts a &str
into a String
.
The result is allocated on the heap.
impl From<Box<str>> for String
fn from(s: Box<str>) -> String
Converts the given boxed str
slice to a String
. It is notable that the str
slice is owned.
Examples
let s1: String = String::from("hello world");
let s2: Box<str> = s1.into_boxed_str();
let s3: String = String::from(s2);
assert_eq!("hello world", s3)
impl<'a> From<Cow<'a, str>> for String
fn from(s: Cow<'a, str>) -> String
Converts a clone-on-write string to an owned instance of String
.
This extracts the owned string, clones the string if it is not already owned.
Example
// If the string is not owned...
let cow: Cow<'_, str> = Cow::Borrowed("eggplant");
// It will allocate on the heap and copy the string.
let owned: String = String::from(cow);
assert_eq!(&owned[..], "eggplant");
impl From<String> for Arc<str>
fn from(v: String) -> Arc<str>
Allocate a reference-counted str
and copy v
into it.
Example
let unique: String = "eggplant".to_owned();
let shared: Arc<str> = Arc::from(unique);
assert_eq!("eggplant", &shared[..]);
impl From<String> for Box<dyn Error>
fn from(str_err: String) -> Box<dyn Error>
impl From<String> for Box<dyn Error + Send + Sync>
fn from(err: String) -> Box<dyn Error + Send + Sync>
Converts a String
into a box of dyn Error
+ Send
+ Sync
.
Examples
use std::error::Error;
use std::mem;
let a_string_error = "a string error".to_string();
let a_boxed_error = Box::<dyn Error + Send + Sync>::from(a_string_error);
assert!(
mem::size_of::<Box<dyn Error + Send + Sync>>() == mem::size_of_val(&a_boxed_error))
impl From<String> for Box<str>
fn from(s: String) -> Box<str>
Converts the given String
to a boxed str
slice that is owned.
Examples
let s1: String = String::from("hello world");
let s2: Box<str> = Box::from(s1);
let s3: String = String::from(s2);
assert_eq!("hello world", s3)
impl<'a> From<String> for Cow<'a, str>
fn from(s: String) -> Cow<'a, str>
impl From<String> for OsString
fn from(s: String) -> OsString
impl From<String> for PathBuf
fn from(s: String) -> PathBuf
impl From<String> for Rc<str>
fn from(v: String) -> Rc<str>
Allocate a reference-counted string slice and copy v
into it.
Example
let original: String = "statue".to_owned();
let shared: Rc<str> = Rc::from(original);
assert_eq!("statue", &shared[..]);
impl From<String> for Vec<u8>
fn from(string: String) -> Vec<u8> ⓘ
impl From<char> for String
fn from(c: char) -> String
Allocates an owned String
from a single character.
Example
let c: char = 'a';
let s: String = String::from(c);
assert_eq!("a", &s[..]);
impl<'a> FromIterator<&'a char> for String
fn from_iter<I>(iter: I) -> String
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = &'a char>,
impl<'a> FromIterator<&'a str> for String
fn from_iter<I>(iter: I) -> String
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = &'a str>,
impl FromIterator<Box<str>> for String
fn from_iter<I>(iter: I) -> String
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = Box<str>>,
impl<'a> FromIterator<Cow<'a, str>> for String
fn from_iter<I>(iter: I) -> String
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = Cow<'a, str>>,
impl<'a> FromIterator<String> for Cow<'a, str>
fn from_iter<I>(it: I) -> Cow<'a, str>
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = String>,
impl FromIterator<String> for String
fn from_iter<I>(iter: I) -> String
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = String>,
impl FromIterator<char> for String
fn from_iter<I>(iter: I) -> String
where
I: IntoIterator<Item = char>,
impl FromStr for String
type Err = Infallible
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<String, <String as FromStr>::Err>
s
to return a value of this type. Read more
impl Hash for String
fn hash<H>(&self, hasher: &mut H)
where
H: Hasher,
fn hash_slice<H>(data: &[Self], state: &mut H)
where
H: Hasher,
Self: Sized,
impl Index<Range<usize>> for String
type Output = str
fn index(&self, index: Range<usize>) -> &str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl Index<RangeFrom<usize>> for String
type Output = str
fn index(&self, index: RangeFrom<usize>) -> &str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl Index<RangeFull> for String
type Output = str
fn index(&self, _index: RangeFull) -> &str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl Index<RangeInclusive<usize>> for String
type Output = str
fn index(&self, index: RangeInclusive<usize>) -> &str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl Index<RangeTo<usize>> for String
type Output = str
fn index(&self, index: RangeTo<usize>) -> &str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl Index<RangeToInclusive<usize>> for String
type Output = str
fn index(&self, index: RangeToInclusive<usize>) -> &str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl IndexMut<Range<usize>> for String
fn index_mut(&mut self, index: Range<usize>) -> &mut str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl IndexMut<RangeFrom<usize>> for String
fn index_mut(&mut self, index: RangeFrom<usize>) -> &mut str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl IndexMut<RangeFull> for String
fn index_mut(&mut self, _index: RangeFull) -> &mut str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl IndexMut<RangeInclusive<usize>> for String
fn index_mut(&mut self, index: RangeInclusive<usize>) -> &mut str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl IndexMut<RangeTo<usize>> for String
fn index_mut(&mut self, index: RangeTo<usize>) -> &mut str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl IndexMut<RangeToInclusive<usize>> for String
fn index_mut(&mut self, index: RangeToInclusive<usize>) -> &mut str
container[index]
) operation. Read more
impl Ord for String
fn cmp(&self, other: &String) -> Ordering
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Self
where
Self: Sized,
fn min(self, other: Self) -> Self
where
Self: Sized,
fn clamp(self, min: Self, max: Self) -> Self
where
Self: Sized + PartialOrd,
impl<'a, 'b> PartialEq<&'a str> for String
fn eq(&self, other: &&'a str) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &&'a str) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl<'a, 'b> PartialEq<Cow<'a, str>> for String
fn eq(&self, other: &Cow<'a, str>) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &Cow<'a, str>) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl<'a, 'b> PartialEq<String> for &'a str
fn eq(&self, other: &String) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &String) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl<'a, 'b> PartialEq<String> for Cow<'a, str>
fn eq(&self, other: &String) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &String) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl<'a, 'b> PartialEq<String> for str
fn eq(&self, other: &String) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &String) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl<'a, 'b> PartialEq<str> for String
fn eq(&self, other: &str) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &str) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl PartialEq for String
fn eq(&self, other: &String) -> bool
self
and other
values to be equal, and is used by ==
.
fn ne(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
!=
. The default implementation is almost always sufficient, and should not be overridden without very good reason.
impl PartialOrd for String
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &String) -> Option<Ordering>
fn lt(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
fn le(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
fn gt(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
fn ge(&self, other: &Rhs) -> bool
self
and other
) and is used by the >=
operator. Read more
impl<'a, 'b> Pattern<'a> for &'b String
A convenience impl that delegates to the impl for &str
.
Examples
assert_eq!(String::from("Hello world").find("world"), Some(6));
type Searcher = <&'b str as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher
pattern
#27721)
fn into_searcher(self, haystack: &'a str) -> <&'b str as Pattern<'a>>::Searcher
pattern
#27721)
self
and the haystack
to search in.
fn is_contained_in(self, haystack: &'a str) -> bool
pattern
#27721)
fn is_prefix_of(self, haystack: &'a str) -> bool
pattern
#27721)
fn strip_prefix_of(self, haystack: &'a str) -> Option<&'a str>
pattern
#27721)
fn is_suffix_of(self, haystack: &'a str) -> bool
pattern
#27721)
fn strip_suffix_of(self, haystack: &'a str) -> Option<&'a str>
pattern
#27721)
impl ToSocketAddrs for String
type Iter = IntoIter<SocketAddr>
fn to_socket_addrs(&self) -> Result<IntoIter<SocketAddr>>
SocketAddr
s. Read more
impl Write for String
fn write_str(&mut self, s: &str) -> Result<(), Error>
fn write_char(&mut self, c: char) -> Result<(), Error>
fn write_fmt(&mut self, args: Arguments<'_>) -> Result<(), Error>
impl Eq for String
impl StructuralEq for String
impl StructuralPartialEq for String
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for String
impl Send for String
impl Sync for String
impl Unpin for String
impl UnwindSafe for String
Blanket Implementations
impl<T> Any for T
where
T: 'static + ?Sized,
impl<T> Borrow<T> for T
where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T
where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> From<T> for T
fn from(t: T) -> T
Returns the argument unchanged.
impl<T, U> Into<U> for T
where
U: From<T>,
fn into(self) -> U
Calls U::from(self)
.
That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U
chooses to do.
impl<T> ToOwned for T
where
T: Clone,
type Owned = T
fn to_owned(&self) -> T
fn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)
impl<T> ToString for T
where
T: Display + ?Sized,
impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T
where
U: Into<T>,
type Error = Infallible
fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>
impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T
where
U: TryFrom<T>,
type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error
fn try_into(self) -> Result<U, <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error>
© 2010 The Rust Project Developers
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license, at your option.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/string/struct.String.html