1.0.0[−][src]Trait std::str::FromStr
Parse a value from a string
FromStr
's from_str
method is often used implicitly, through
str
's parse
method. See parse
's documentation for examples.
FromStr
does not have a lifetime parameter, and so you can only parse types
that do not contain a lifetime parameter themselves. In other words, you can
parse an i32
with FromStr
, but not a &i32
. You can parse a struct that
contains an i32
, but not one that contains an &i32
.
Examples
Basic implementation of FromStr
on an example Point
type:
use std::str::FromStr; use std::num::ParseIntError; #[derive(Debug, PartialEq)] struct Point { x: i32, y: i32 } impl FromStr for Point { type Err = ParseIntError; fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err> { let coords: Vec<&str> = s.trim_matches(|p| p == '(' || p == ')' ) .split(',') .collect(); let x_fromstr = coords[0].parse::<i32>()?; let y_fromstr = coords[1].parse::<i32>()?; Ok(Point { x: x_fromstr, y: y_fromstr }) } } let p = Point::from_str("(1,2)"); assert_eq!(p.unwrap(), Point{ x: 1, y: 2} )Run
Associated Types
type Err
The associated error which can be returned from parsing.
Required methods
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err>
Parses a string s
to return a value of this type.
If parsing succeeds, return the value inside Ok
, otherwise
when the string is ill-formatted return an error specific to the
inside Err
. The error type is specific to implementation of the trait.
Examples
Basic usage with i32
, a type that implements FromStr
:
use std::str::FromStr; let s = "5"; let x = i32::from_str(s).unwrap(); assert_eq!(5, x);Run
Implementors
impl FromStr for IpAddr
[src]
type Err = AddrParseError
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<IpAddr, AddrParseError>
[src]
impl FromStr for SocketAddr
[src]
type Err = AddrParseError
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<SocketAddr, AddrParseError>
[src]
impl FromStr for bool
[src]
type Err = ParseBoolError
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<bool, ParseBoolError>
[src]
Parse a bool
from a string.
Yields a Result<bool, ParseBoolError>
, because s
may or may not
actually be parseable.
Examples
use std::str::FromStr; assert_eq!(FromStr::from_str("true"), Ok(true)); assert_eq!(FromStr::from_str("false"), Ok(false)); assert!(<bool as FromStr>::from_str("not even a boolean").is_err());Run
Note, in many cases, the .parse()
method on str
is more proper.
assert_eq!("true".parse(), Ok(true)); assert_eq!("false".parse(), Ok(false)); assert!("not even a boolean".parse::<bool>().is_err());Run
impl FromStr for char
[src]
impl FromStr for f32
[src]
type Err = ParseFloatError
fn from_str(src: &str) -> Result<f32, ParseFloatError>
[src]
Converts a string in base 10 to a float. Accepts an optional decimal exponent.
This function accepts strings such as
- '3.14'
- '-3.14'
- '2.5E10', or equivalently, '2.5e10'
- '2.5E-10'
- '5.'
- '.5', or, equivalently, '0.5'
- 'inf', '-inf', 'NaN'
Leading and trailing whitespace represent an error.
Grammar
All strings that adhere to the following EBNF grammar
will result in an Ok
being returned:
Float ::= Sign? ( 'inf' | 'NaN' | Number )
Number ::= ( Digit+ |
Digit+ '.' Digit* |
Digit* '.' Digit+ ) Exp?
Exp ::= [eE] Sign? Digit+
Sign ::= [+-]
Digit ::= [0-9]
Known bugs
In some situations, some strings that should create a valid float instead return an error. See issue #31407 for details.
Arguments
- src - A string
Return value
Err(ParseFloatError)
if the string did not represent a valid
number. Otherwise, Ok(n)
where n
is the floating-point
number represented by src
.
impl FromStr for f64
[src]
type Err = ParseFloatError
fn from_str(src: &str) -> Result<f64, ParseFloatError>
[src]
Converts a string in base 10 to a float. Accepts an optional decimal exponent.
This function accepts strings such as
- '3.14'
- '-3.14'
- '2.5E10', or equivalently, '2.5e10'
- '2.5E-10'
- '5.'
- '.5', or, equivalently, '0.5'
- 'inf', '-inf', 'NaN'
Leading and trailing whitespace represent an error.
Grammar
All strings that adhere to the following EBNF grammar
will result in an Ok
being returned:
Float ::= Sign? ( 'inf' | 'NaN' | Number )
Number ::= ( Digit+ |
Digit+ '.' Digit* |
Digit* '.' Digit+ ) Exp?
Exp ::= [eE] Sign? Digit+
Sign ::= [+-]
Digit ::= [0-9]
Known bugs
In some situations, some strings that should create a valid float instead return an error. See issue #31407 for details.
Arguments
- src - A string
Return value
Err(ParseFloatError)
if the string did not represent a valid
number. Otherwise, Ok(n)
where n
is the floating-point
number represented by src
.