January 2019
Beginner to intermediate
554 pages
13h 31m
English
For cases where the compiler can't figure out the lifetime of values by examining the code, we need to tell Rust by using some annotations in code. To distinguish from identifiers, lifetime annotations are denoted by a quirky symbol of prefixing a letter with '. So, to make our previous example compile with a parameter, we have added a lifetime annotation on our StructRef, like so:
// using_lifetimes.rsstruct SomeRef<'a, T> { part: &'a T}fn main() { let _a = SomeRef { part: &43 };}
A lifetime is denoted by a ', followed by any sequence of valid identifiers. But, by convention, most lifetimes used in the Rust code uses 'a, 'b and 'c as lifetime parameters. If you have multiple lifetimes on a type, you can use longer descriptive ...
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