How to create a Rust struct with string members?

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再見小時候
再見小時候 2021-01-30 07:56

I want the members to be owned by the struct. Sorry for the simple question, but I wasn\'t able to find an example. I\'m looking for the correct declaration of a struct and inst

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  • 2021-01-30 08:53

    If the string has to be owned by the struct, then you should use String. Alternatively, you could use an &str with a static lifetime (i.e., the lifetime of the program). For example:

    struct Foo {
        bar: String,
        baz: &'static str,
    }
    
    fn main() {
        let foo = Foo {
            bar: "bar".to_string(),
            baz: "baz",
        };
        println!("{}, {}", foo.bar, foo.baz);
    }
    

    If the lifetime of the string is unknown, then you can parameterize Foo with a lifetime:

    struct Foo<'a> {
        baz: &'a str,
    }
    

    See also:

    • What are the differences between Rust's `String` and `str`?

    If you're not sure whether the string will be owned or not (useful for avoiding allocations), then you can use borrow::Cow:

    use std::borrow::Cow;
    
    struct Foo<'a> {
        baz: Cow<'a, str>,
    }
    
    fn main() {
        let foo1 = Foo {
            baz: Cow::Borrowed("baz"),
        };
        let foo2 = Foo {
            baz: Cow::Owned("baz".to_string()),
        };
        println!("{}, {}", foo1.baz, foo2.baz);
    }
    

    Note that the Cow type is parameterized over a lifetime. The lifetime refers to the lifetime of the borrowed string (i.e., when it is a Borrowed). If you have a Cow, then you can use borrow and get a &'a str, with which you can do normal string operations without worrying about whether to allocate a new string or not. Typically, explicit calling of borrow isn't required because of deref coercions. Namely, Cow values will dereference to their borrowed form automatically, so &*val where val has type Cow<'a, str> will produce a &str.

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