Struct wayland_sys::client::WAYLAND_CLIENT_OPTION []

pub struct WAYLAND_CLIENT_OPTION {
    // some fields omitted
}

Methods from Deref<Target=Option<WaylandClient>>

1.0.0fn is_some(&self) -> bool

Returns true if the option is a Some value

Examples

let x: Option<u32> = Some(2);
assert_eq!(x.is_some(), true);

let x: Option<u32> = None;
assert_eq!(x.is_some(), false);

1.0.0fn is_none(&self) -> bool

Returns true if the option is a None value

Examples

let x: Option<u32> = Some(2);
assert_eq!(x.is_none(), false);

let x: Option<u32> = None;
assert_eq!(x.is_none(), true);

1.0.0fn as_ref(&self) -> Option<&T>

Converts from Option<T> to Option<&T>

Examples

Convert an Option<String> into an Option<usize>, preserving the original. The map method takes the self argument by value, consuming the original, so this technique uses as_ref to first take an Option to a reference to the value inside the original.

let num_as_str: Option<String> = Some("10".to_string());
// First, cast `Option<String>` to `Option<&String>` with `as_ref`,
// then consume *that* with `map`, leaving `num_as_str` on the stack.
let num_as_int: Option<usize> = num_as_str.as_ref().map(|n| n.len());
println!("still can print num_as_str: {:?}", num_as_str);

1.0.0fn as_mut(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T>

Converts from Option<T> to Option<&mut T>

Examples

let mut x = Some(2);
match x.as_mut() {
    Some(v) => *v = 42,
    None => {},
}
assert_eq!(x, Some(42));

1.0.0fn expect(self, msg: &str) -> T

Unwraps an option, yielding the content of a Some.

Panics

Panics if the value is a None with a custom panic message provided by msg.

Examples

let x = Some("value");
assert_eq!(x.expect("the world is ending"), "value");
let x: Option<&str> = None;
x.expect("the world is ending"); // panics with `the world is ending`

1.0.0fn unwrap(self) -> T

Moves the value v out of the Option<T> if it is Some(v).

Panics

Panics if the self value equals None.

Safety note

In general, because this function may panic, its use is discouraged. Instead, prefer to use pattern matching and handle the None case explicitly.

Examples

let x = Some("air");
assert_eq!(x.unwrap(), "air");
let x: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.unwrap(), "air"); // fails

1.0.0fn unwrap_or(self, def: T) -> T

Returns the contained value or a default.

Examples

assert_eq!(Some("car").unwrap_or("bike"), "car");
assert_eq!(None.unwrap_or("bike"), "bike");

1.0.0fn unwrap_or_else<F>(self, f: F) -> T where F: FnOnce() -> T

Returns the contained value or computes it from a closure.

Examples

let k = 10;
assert_eq!(Some(4).unwrap_or_else(|| 2 * k), 4);
assert_eq!(None.unwrap_or_else(|| 2 * k), 20);

1.0.0fn map<U, F>(self, f: F) -> Option<U> where F: FnOnce(T) -> U

Maps an Option<T> to Option<U> by applying a function to a contained value

Examples

Convert an Option<String> into an Option<usize>, consuming the original:

let maybe_some_string = Some(String::from("Hello, World!"));
// `Option::map` takes self *by value*, consuming `maybe_some_string`
let maybe_some_len = maybe_some_string.map(|s| s.len());

assert_eq!(maybe_some_len, Some(13));

1.0.0fn map_or<U, F>(self, default: U, f: F) -> U where F: FnOnce(T) -> U

Applies a function to the contained value (if any), or returns a default (if not).

Examples

let x = Some("foo");
assert_eq!(x.map_or(42, |v| v.len()), 3);

let x: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.map_or(42, |v| v.len()), 42);

1.0.0fn map_or_else<U, D, F>(self, default: D, f: F) -> U where F: FnOnce(T) -> U, D: FnOnce() -> U

Applies a function to the contained value (if any), or computes a default (if not).

Examples

let k = 21;

let x = Some("foo");
assert_eq!(x.map_or_else(|| 2 * k, |v| v.len()), 3);

let x: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.map_or_else(|| 2 * k, |v| v.len()), 42);

1.0.0fn ok_or<E>(self, err: E) -> Result<T, E>

Transforms the Option<T> into a Result<T, E>, mapping Some(v) to Ok(v) and None to Err(err).

Examples

let x = Some("foo");
assert_eq!(x.ok_or(0), Ok("foo"));

let x: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.ok_or(0), Err(0));

1.0.0fn ok_or_else<E, F>(self, err: F) -> Result<T, E> where F: FnOnce() -> E

Transforms the Option<T> into a Result<T, E>, mapping Some(v) to Ok(v) and None to Err(err()).

Examples

let x = Some("foo");
assert_eq!(x.ok_or_else(|| 0), Ok("foo"));

let x: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.ok_or_else(|| 0), Err(0));

1.0.0fn iter(&self) -> Iter<T>

Returns an iterator over the possibly contained value.

Examples

let x = Some(4);
assert_eq!(x.iter().next(), Some(&4));

let x: Option<u32> = None;
assert_eq!(x.iter().next(), None);

1.0.0fn iter_mut(&mut self) -> IterMut<T>

Returns a mutable iterator over the possibly contained value.

Examples

let mut x = Some(4);
match x.iter_mut().next() {
    Some(v) => *v = 42,
    None => {},
}
assert_eq!(x, Some(42));

let mut x: Option<u32> = None;
assert_eq!(x.iter_mut().next(), None);

1.0.0fn and<U>(self, optb: Option<U>) -> Option<U>

Returns None if the option is None, otherwise returns optb.

Examples

let x = Some(2);
let y: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.and(y), None);

let x: Option<u32> = None;
let y = Some("foo");
assert_eq!(x.and(y), None);

let x = Some(2);
let y = Some("foo");
assert_eq!(x.and(y), Some("foo"));

let x: Option<u32> = None;
let y: Option<&str> = None;
assert_eq!(x.and(y), None);

1.0.0fn and_then<U, F>(self, f: F) -> Option<U> where F: FnOnce(T) -> Option<U>

Returns None if the option is None, otherwise calls f with the wrapped value and returns the result.

Some languages call this operation flatmap.

Examples

fn sq(x: u32) -> Option<u32> { Some(x * x) }
fn nope(_: u32) -> Option<u32> { None }

assert_eq!(Some(2).and_then(sq).and_then(sq), Some(16));
assert_eq!(Some(2).and_then(sq).and_then(nope), None);
assert_eq!(Some(2).and_then(nope).and_then(sq), None);
assert_eq!(None.and_then(sq).and_then(sq), None);

1.0.0fn or(self, optb: Option<T>) -> Option<T>

Returns the option if it contains a value, otherwise returns optb.

Examples

let x = Some(2);
let y = None;
assert_eq!(x.or(y), Some(2));

let x = None;
let y = Some(100);
assert_eq!(x.or(y), Some(100));

let x = Some(2);
let y = Some(100);
assert_eq!(x.or(y), Some(2));

let x: Option<u32> = None;
let y = None;
assert_eq!(x.or(y), None);

1.0.0fn or_else<F>(self, f: F) -> Option<T> where F: FnOnce() -> Option<T>

Returns the option if it contains a value, otherwise calls f and returns the result.

Examples

fn nobody() -> Option<&'static str> { None }
fn vikings() -> Option<&'static str> { Some("vikings") }

assert_eq!(Some("barbarians").or_else(vikings), Some("barbarians"));
assert_eq!(None.or_else(vikings), Some("vikings"));
assert_eq!(None.or_else(nobody), None);

1.0.0fn take(&mut self) -> Option<T>

Takes the value out of the option, leaving a None in its place.

Examples

let mut x = Some(2);
x.take();
assert_eq!(x, None);

let mut x: Option<u32> = None;
x.take();
assert_eq!(x, None);

1.0.0fn cloned(self) -> Option<T>

Maps an Option<&T> to an Option<T> by cloning the contents of the option.

1.0.0fn unwrap_or_default(self) -> T

Returns the contained value or a default

Consumes the self argument then, if Some, returns the contained value, otherwise if None, returns the default value for that type.

Examples

Convert a string to an integer, turning poorly-formed strings into 0 (the default value for integers). parse converts a string to any other type that implements FromStr, returning None on error.

let good_year_from_input = "1909";
let bad_year_from_input = "190blarg";
let good_year = good_year_from_input.parse().ok().unwrap_or_default();
let bad_year = bad_year_from_input.parse().ok().unwrap_or_default();

assert_eq!(1909, good_year);
assert_eq!(0, bad_year);

Trait Implementations

impl Deref for WAYLAND_CLIENT_OPTION

type Target = Option<WaylandClient>

fn deref<'a>(&'a self) -> &'a Option<WaylandClient>