Struct rayon::iter::Skip [] [src]

pub struct Skip<I> { /* fields omitted */ }

Skip is an iterator that skips over the first n elements. This struct is created by the skip() method on ParallelIterator

Trait Implementations

impl<I> ParallelIterator for Skip<I> where
    I: IndexedParallelIterator
[src]

Internal method used to define the behavior of this parallel iterator. You should not need to call this directly. Read more

Internal method used to define the behavior of this parallel iterator. You should not need to call this directly. Read more

Deprecated since v0.7.0

: try with_min_len or with_max_len instead

Deprecated. If the adaptive algorithms don't split appropriately, try IndexedParallelIterator::with_min_len() or with_max_len() instead. Read more

Deprecated since v0.7.0

: try with_min_len or with_max_len instead

Deprecated. If the adaptive algorithms don't split appropriately, try IndexedParallelIterator::with_min_len() or with_max_len() instead. Read more

Executes OP on each item produced by the iterator, in parallel.

Counts the number of items in this parallel iterator.

Applies map_op to each item of this iterator, producing a new iterator with the results. Read more

Creates an iterator which clones all of its elements. This may be useful when you have an iterator over &T, but you need T. Read more

Applies inspect_op to a reference to each item of this iterator, producing a new iterator passing through the original items. This is often useful for debugging to see what's happening in iterator stages. Read more

Applies filter_op to each item of this iterator, producing a new iterator with only the items that gave true results. Read more

Applies filter_op to each item of this iterator to get an Option, producing a new iterator with only the items from Some results. Read more

Applies map_op to each item of this iterator to get nested iterators, producing a new iterator that flattens these back into one. Read more

Reduces the items in the iterator into one item using op. The argument identity should be a closure that can produce "identity" value which may be inserted into the sequence as needed to create opportunities for parallel execution. So, for example, if you are doing a summation, then identity() ought to produce something that represents the zero for your type (but consider just calling sum() in that case). Read more

Reduces the items in the iterator into one item using op. If the iterator is empty, None is returned; otherwise, Some is returned. Read more

Deprecated since v0.5.0

: call reduce instead

Deprecated. Use reduce() instead.

Parallel fold is similar to sequential fold except that the sequence of items may be subdivided before it is folded. Consider a list of numbers like 22 3 77 89 46. If you used sequential fold to add them (fold(0, |a,b| a+b), you would wind up first adding 0 + 22, then 22 + 3, then 25 + 77, and so forth. The parallel fold works similarly except that it first breaks up your list into sublists, and hence instead of yielding up a single sum at the end, it yields up multiple sums. The number of results is nondeterministic, as is the point where the breaks occur. Read more

Sums up the items in the iterator. Read more

Multiplies all the items in the iterator. Read more

Deprecated since v0.6.0

: name changed to product() to match sequential iterators

DEPRECATED

Computes the minimum of all the items in the iterator. If the iterator is empty, None is returned; otherwise, Some(min) is returned. Read more

Computes the item that yields the minimum value for the given function. If the iterator is empty, None is returned; otherwise, Some(item) is returned. Read more

Computes the maximum of all the items in the iterator. If the iterator is empty, None is returned; otherwise, Some(max) is returned. Read more

Computes the item that yields the maximum value for the given function. If the iterator is empty, None is returned; otherwise, Some(item) is returned. Read more

Takes two iterators and creates a new iterator over both.

Searches for some item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate and returns it. This operation is similar to [find on sequential iterators][find] but the item returned may not be the first one in the parallel sequence which matches, since we search the entire sequence in parallel. Read more

Searches for the first item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate and returns it. Read more

Searches for the last item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate and returns it. Read more

Searches for some item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate, and if so returns true. Once a match is found, we'll attempt to stop process the rest of the items. Proving that there's no match, returning false, does require visiting every item. Read more

Tests that every item in the parallel iterator matches the given predicate, and if so returns true. If a counter-example is found, we'll attempt to stop processing more items, then return false. Read more

Create a fresh collection containing all the element produced by this parallel iterator. Read more

impl<I> ExactParallelIterator for Skip<I> where
    I: IndexedParallelIterator
[src]

Produces an exact count of how many items this iterator will produce, presuming no panic occurs. Read more

Collects the results of the iterator into the specified vector. The vector is always truncated before execution begins. If possible, reusing the vector across calls can lead to better performance since it reuses the same backing buffer. Read more

impl<I> BoundedParallelIterator for Skip<I> where
    I: IndexedParallelIterator
[src]

Internal method used to define the behavior of this parallel iterator. You should not need to call this directly. Read more

impl<I> IndexedParallelIterator for Skip<I> where
    I: IndexedParallelIterator
[src]

Internal method used to define the behavior of this parallel iterator. You should not need to call this directly. Read more

Iterate over tuples (A, B), where the items A are from this iterator and B are from the iterator given as argument. Like the zip method on ordinary iterators, if the two iterators are of unequal length, you only get the items they have in common. Read more

Lexicographically compares the elements of this ParallelIterator with those of another. Read more

Lexicographically compares the elements of this ParallelIterator with those of another. Read more

Determines if the elements of this ParallelIterator are equal to those of another Read more

Determines if the elements of this ParallelIterator are unequal to those of another Read more

Determines if the elements of this ParallelIterator are lexicographically less than those of another. Read more

Determines if the elements of this ParallelIterator are less or equal to those of another. Read more

Determines if the elements of this ParallelIterator are lexicographically greater than those of another. Read more

Determines if the elements of this ParallelIterator are less or equal to those of another. Read more

Yields an index along with each item.

Creates an iterator that skips the first n elements.

Creates an iterator that yields the first n elements.

Searches for some item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate, and returns its index. Like ParallelIterator::find_any, the parallel search will not necessarily find the first match, and once a match is found we'll attempt to stop processing any more. Read more

Searches for the first item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate, and returns its index. Read more

Searches for the last item in the parallel iterator that matches the given predicate, and returns its index. Read more

Produces a new iterator with the elements of this iterator in reverse order. Read more

Sets the minimum length of iterators desired to process in each thread. Rayon will not split any smaller than this length, but of course an iterator could already be smaller to begin with. Read more

Sets the maximum length of iterators desired to process in each thread. Rayon will try to split at least below this length, unless that would put it below the length from with_min_len(). For example, given min=10 and max=15, a length of 16 will not be split any further. Read more