Expand description
§another-option
This package provides Opt<T> as an alternative to Option<T>. Why would you want another
option? Opt provides advantages when:
- the generic type,
T, is expensive to allocate, and - mutation between
NoneandSome(...)is frequent.
§Examples
Since Rust’s built-in Option<T> is an enum, it will drop its Some(...) value when None
is assigned.
let mut option: Option<String> = Some(String::with_capacity(1024));
option = None; // drops the string
option = Some(String::with_capacity(1024)); // allocationSince Opt<T> always owns the value, even when empty, the value can be reused without drops
or allocations:
use crate::another_option::Opt;
let mut opt: Opt<String> = Opt::some(String::with_capacity(1024));
opt.map_in_place(|v| v.push_str("value"));
opt.set_none(); // does *not* drop the string
opt.set_some();
assert_eq!(opt.unwrap(), String::from("value"));