How to use instanced struct values in a match statement?












-1














I have an example instanced struct, named args, of the original struct Args.



struct Args {
arg1: bool,
arg2: bool,
}


and the instanced struct being:



let args = Args {
arg1: true,
arg2: false,
}


Using these arguments, I am attempting to avoid a jumble of if-else statments and just use a match statement. However, when attempting to perform the following:



match true {
args.arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
args.arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
}


I am given the error



error: expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|`, found `.`
--> src/main.rs:13:13
|
13 | args.arg1 => println!("Argument one is true"),
| ^ expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|` here

error: aborting due to previous error


Is there an escape character sequence I should use to avoid this, or is this simply incorrect syntax?










share|improve this question






















  • Does this help ?
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:15










  • It's good to know this is possible, but my production program is using several arguments, not two alone... Iterating over all possible combinations would be a pain :/
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:20






  • 1




    I can't help you about something I can't see.
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:24










  • For example, instead of just arg1 and arg2, it has arg1 through arg10.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:26
















-1














I have an example instanced struct, named args, of the original struct Args.



struct Args {
arg1: bool,
arg2: bool,
}


and the instanced struct being:



let args = Args {
arg1: true,
arg2: false,
}


Using these arguments, I am attempting to avoid a jumble of if-else statments and just use a match statement. However, when attempting to perform the following:



match true {
args.arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
args.arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
}


I am given the error



error: expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|`, found `.`
--> src/main.rs:13:13
|
13 | args.arg1 => println!("Argument one is true"),
| ^ expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|` here

error: aborting due to previous error


Is there an escape character sequence I should use to avoid this, or is this simply incorrect syntax?










share|improve this question






















  • Does this help ?
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:15










  • It's good to know this is possible, but my production program is using several arguments, not two alone... Iterating over all possible combinations would be a pain :/
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:20






  • 1




    I can't help you about something I can't see.
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:24










  • For example, instead of just arg1 and arg2, it has arg1 through arg10.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:26














-1












-1








-1


1





I have an example instanced struct, named args, of the original struct Args.



struct Args {
arg1: bool,
arg2: bool,
}


and the instanced struct being:



let args = Args {
arg1: true,
arg2: false,
}


Using these arguments, I am attempting to avoid a jumble of if-else statments and just use a match statement. However, when attempting to perform the following:



match true {
args.arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
args.arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
}


I am given the error



error: expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|`, found `.`
--> src/main.rs:13:13
|
13 | args.arg1 => println!("Argument one is true"),
| ^ expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|` here

error: aborting due to previous error


Is there an escape character sequence I should use to avoid this, or is this simply incorrect syntax?










share|improve this question













I have an example instanced struct, named args, of the original struct Args.



struct Args {
arg1: bool,
arg2: bool,
}


and the instanced struct being:



let args = Args {
arg1: true,
arg2: false,
}


Using these arguments, I am attempting to avoid a jumble of if-else statments and just use a match statement. However, when attempting to perform the following:



match true {
args.arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
args.arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
}


I am given the error



error: expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|`, found `.`
--> src/main.rs:13:13
|
13 | args.arg1 => println!("Argument one is true"),
| ^ expected one of `=>`, `@`, `if`, or `|` here

error: aborting due to previous error


Is there an escape character sequence I should use to avoid this, or is this simply incorrect syntax?







syntax rust






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Nov 23 at 0:05









aethio

82




82












  • Does this help ?
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:15










  • It's good to know this is possible, but my production program is using several arguments, not two alone... Iterating over all possible combinations would be a pain :/
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:20






  • 1




    I can't help you about something I can't see.
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:24










  • For example, instead of just arg1 and arg2, it has arg1 through arg10.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:26


















  • Does this help ?
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:15










  • It's good to know this is possible, but my production program is using several arguments, not two alone... Iterating over all possible combinations would be a pain :/
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:20






  • 1




    I can't help you about something I can't see.
    – Stargateur
    Nov 23 at 0:24










  • For example, instead of just arg1 and arg2, it has arg1 through arg10.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:26
















Does this help ?
– Stargateur
Nov 23 at 0:15




Does this help ?
– Stargateur
Nov 23 at 0:15












It's good to know this is possible, but my production program is using several arguments, not two alone... Iterating over all possible combinations would be a pain :/
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:20




It's good to know this is possible, but my production program is using several arguments, not two alone... Iterating over all possible combinations would be a pain :/
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:20




1




1




I can't help you about something I can't see.
– Stargateur
Nov 23 at 0:24




I can't help you about something I can't see.
– Stargateur
Nov 23 at 0:24












For example, instead of just arg1 and arg2, it has arg1 through arg10.
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:26




For example, instead of just arg1 and arg2, it has arg1 through arg10.
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:26












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














It is unclear to me what you mean to happen for the case where you have both arg1 and arg2 set to true - do you just want the first branch of the if to be taken, or both?



If its both - then really you should just use multiple ifs.



if args.arg1 { println!("Argument 1 is true!") }
if args.arg2 { println!("Argument 2 is true!") }


If only one should occur preferring arg1, then you can use a struct destructure



match args {
Args { arg1:true, ..} => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args { arg2:true, ..} => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
_ => println!("Neither is true")
}


You can use the match to match more complex cases too



match args {
Args {arg1:true, arg2:false, ...} => println!("TF"),
}


However, if at most one argument can be true at once, you really have an enum and should probably handle it like



enum Arg {
None,
Arg1,
Arg2
}

fn main() {
let args:Args = get_argument();
match args {
Args::None => println!("none"),
Args::Arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args::Arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!")
}
}





share|improve this answer























  • It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:43










  • If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
    – Michael Anderson
    Nov 23 at 0:46










  • I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:56











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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














It is unclear to me what you mean to happen for the case where you have both arg1 and arg2 set to true - do you just want the first branch of the if to be taken, or both?



If its both - then really you should just use multiple ifs.



if args.arg1 { println!("Argument 1 is true!") }
if args.arg2 { println!("Argument 2 is true!") }


If only one should occur preferring arg1, then you can use a struct destructure



match args {
Args { arg1:true, ..} => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args { arg2:true, ..} => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
_ => println!("Neither is true")
}


You can use the match to match more complex cases too



match args {
Args {arg1:true, arg2:false, ...} => println!("TF"),
}


However, if at most one argument can be true at once, you really have an enum and should probably handle it like



enum Arg {
None,
Arg1,
Arg2
}

fn main() {
let args:Args = get_argument();
match args {
Args::None => println!("none"),
Args::Arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args::Arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!")
}
}





share|improve this answer























  • It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:43










  • If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
    – Michael Anderson
    Nov 23 at 0:46










  • I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:56
















3














It is unclear to me what you mean to happen for the case where you have both arg1 and arg2 set to true - do you just want the first branch of the if to be taken, or both?



If its both - then really you should just use multiple ifs.



if args.arg1 { println!("Argument 1 is true!") }
if args.arg2 { println!("Argument 2 is true!") }


If only one should occur preferring arg1, then you can use a struct destructure



match args {
Args { arg1:true, ..} => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args { arg2:true, ..} => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
_ => println!("Neither is true")
}


You can use the match to match more complex cases too



match args {
Args {arg1:true, arg2:false, ...} => println!("TF"),
}


However, if at most one argument can be true at once, you really have an enum and should probably handle it like



enum Arg {
None,
Arg1,
Arg2
}

fn main() {
let args:Args = get_argument();
match args {
Args::None => println!("none"),
Args::Arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args::Arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!")
}
}





share|improve this answer























  • It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:43










  • If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
    – Michael Anderson
    Nov 23 at 0:46










  • I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:56














3












3








3






It is unclear to me what you mean to happen for the case where you have both arg1 and arg2 set to true - do you just want the first branch of the if to be taken, or both?



If its both - then really you should just use multiple ifs.



if args.arg1 { println!("Argument 1 is true!") }
if args.arg2 { println!("Argument 2 is true!") }


If only one should occur preferring arg1, then you can use a struct destructure



match args {
Args { arg1:true, ..} => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args { arg2:true, ..} => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
_ => println!("Neither is true")
}


You can use the match to match more complex cases too



match args {
Args {arg1:true, arg2:false, ...} => println!("TF"),
}


However, if at most one argument can be true at once, you really have an enum and should probably handle it like



enum Arg {
None,
Arg1,
Arg2
}

fn main() {
let args:Args = get_argument();
match args {
Args::None => println!("none"),
Args::Arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args::Arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!")
}
}





share|improve this answer














It is unclear to me what you mean to happen for the case where you have both arg1 and arg2 set to true - do you just want the first branch of the if to be taken, or both?



If its both - then really you should just use multiple ifs.



if args.arg1 { println!("Argument 1 is true!") }
if args.arg2 { println!("Argument 2 is true!") }


If only one should occur preferring arg1, then you can use a struct destructure



match args {
Args { arg1:true, ..} => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args { arg2:true, ..} => println!("Argument 2 is true!"),
_ => println!("Neither is true")
}


You can use the match to match more complex cases too



match args {
Args {arg1:true, arg2:false, ...} => println!("TF"),
}


However, if at most one argument can be true at once, you really have an enum and should probably handle it like



enum Arg {
None,
Arg1,
Arg2
}

fn main() {
let args:Args = get_argument();
match args {
Args::None => println!("none"),
Args::Arg1 => println!("Argument 1 is true!"),
Args::Arg2 => println!("Argument 2 is true!")
}
}






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 23 at 1:36









aethio

82




82










answered Nov 23 at 0:29









Michael Anderson

44.6k693146




44.6k693146












  • It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:43










  • If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
    – Michael Anderson
    Nov 23 at 0:46










  • I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:56


















  • It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:43










  • If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
    – Michael Anderson
    Nov 23 at 0:46










  • I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
    – aethio
    Nov 23 at 0:56
















It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:43




It's a good point you raise! I created this with the expectation that only one arg would be true at once.
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:43












If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
– Michael Anderson
Nov 23 at 0:46




If only one is true at once, you really have an enum. I'll update the code to detail that too.
– Michael Anderson
Nov 23 at 0:46












I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:56




I haven't yet gotten to the Enums chapter of The Book yet; but your code is perfect in my situation.. thank you!!
– aethio
Nov 23 at 0:56


















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