pub trait Ord: Eq + PartialOrd {
// Required method
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering;
// Provided methods
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Self
where Self: Sized { ... }
fn min(self, other: Self) -> Self
where Self: Sized { ... }
fn clamp(self, min: Self, max: Self) -> Self
where Self: Sized { ... }
}Expand description
Trait for types that form a total order.
Implementations must be consistent with the PartialOrd implementation, and ensure max,
min, and clamp are consistent with cmp:
partial_cmp(a, b) == Some(cmp(a, b)).max(a, b) == max_by(a, b, cmp)(ensured by the default implementation).min(a, b) == min_by(a, b, cmp)(ensured by the default implementation).- For
a.clamp(min, max), see the method docs (ensured by the default implementation).
Violating these requirements is a logic error. The behavior resulting from a logic error is not
specified, but users of the trait must ensure that such logic errors do not result in
undefined behavior. This means that unsafe code must not rely on the correctness of these
methods.
§Corollaries
From the above and the requirements of PartialOrd, it follows that for all a, b and c:
- exactly one of
a < b,a == bora > bis true; and <is transitive:a < bandb < cimpliesa < c. The same must hold for both==and>.
Mathematically speaking, the < operator defines a strict weak order. In cases where ==
conforms to mathematical equality, it also defines a strict total order.
§Derivable
This trait can be used with #[derive].
When derived on structs, it will produce a
lexicographic ordering based on the
top-to-bottom declaration order of the struct’s members.
When derived on enums, variants are ordered primarily by their discriminants. Secondarily,
they are ordered by their fields. By default, the discriminant is smallest for variants at the
top, and largest for variants at the bottom. Here’s an example:
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord)]
enum E {
Top,
Bottom,
}
assert!(E::Top < E::Bottom);However, manually setting the discriminants can override this default behavior:
#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, PartialOrd, Ord)]
enum E {
Top = 2,
Bottom = 1,
}
assert!(E::Bottom < E::Top);§Lexicographical comparison
Lexicographical comparison is an operation with the following properties:
- Two sequences are compared element by element.
- The first mismatching element defines which sequence is lexicographically less or greater than the other.
- If one sequence is a prefix of another, the shorter sequence is lexicographically less than the other.
- If two sequences have equivalent elements and are of the same length, then the sequences are lexicographically equal.
- An empty sequence is lexicographically less than any non-empty sequence.
- Two empty sequences are lexicographically equal.
§How can I implement Ord?
Ord requires that the type also be PartialOrd, PartialEq, and Eq.
Because Ord implies a stronger ordering relationship than PartialOrd, and both Ord and
PartialOrd must agree, you must choose how to implement Ord first. You can choose to
derive it, or implement it manually. If you derive it, you should derive all four traits. If you
implement it manually, you should manually implement all four traits, based on the
implementation of Ord.
Here’s an example where you want to define the Character comparison by health and
experience only, disregarding the field mana:
use std::cmp::Ordering;
struct Character {
health: u32,
experience: u32,
mana: f32,
}
impl Ord for Character {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering {
self.experience
.cmp(&other.experience)
.then(self.health.cmp(&other.health))
}
}
impl PartialOrd for Character {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> {
Some(self.cmp(other))
}
}
impl PartialEq for Character {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
self.health == other.health && self.experience == other.experience
}
}
impl Eq for Character {}If all you need is to slice::sort a type by a field value, it can be simpler to use
slice::sort_by_key.
§Examples of incorrect Ord implementations
use std::cmp::Ordering;
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Character {
health: f32,
}
impl Ord for Character {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
if self.health < other.health {
Ordering::Less
} else if self.health > other.health {
Ordering::Greater
} else {
Ordering::Equal
}
}
}
impl PartialOrd for Character {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> {
Some(self.cmp(other))
}
}
impl PartialEq for Character {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
self.health == other.health
}
}
impl Eq for Character {}
let a = Character { health: 4.5 };
let b = Character { health: f32::NAN };
// Mistake: floating-point values do not form a total order and using the built-in comparison
// operands to implement `Ord` irregardless of that reality does not change it. Use
// `f32::total_cmp` if you need a total order for floating-point values.
// Reflexivity requirement of `Ord` is not given.
assert!(a == a);
assert!(b != b);
// Antisymmetry requirement of `Ord` is not given. Only one of a < c and c < a is allowed to be
// true, not both or neither.
assert_eq!((a < b) as u8 + (b < a) as u8, 0);use std::cmp::Ordering;
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Character {
health: u32,
experience: u32,
}
impl PartialOrd for Character {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> {
Some(self.cmp(other))
}
}
impl Ord for Character {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> std::cmp::Ordering {
if self.health < 50 {
self.health.cmp(&other.health)
} else {
self.experience.cmp(&other.experience)
}
}
}
// For performance reasons implementing `PartialEq` this way is not the idiomatic way, but it
// ensures consistent behavior between `PartialEq`, `PartialOrd` and `Ord` in this example.
impl PartialEq for Character {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
self.cmp(other) == Ordering::Equal
}
}
impl Eq for Character {}
let a = Character {
health: 3,
experience: 5,
};
let b = Character {
health: 10,
experience: 77,
};
let c = Character {
health: 143,
experience: 2,
};
// Mistake: The implementation of `Ord` compares different fields depending on the value of
// `self.health`, the resulting order is not total.
// Transitivity requirement of `Ord` is not given. If a is smaller than b and b is smaller than
// c, by transitive property a must also be smaller than c.
assert!(a < b && b < c && c < a);
// Antisymmetry requirement of `Ord` is not given. Only one of a < c and c < a is allowed to be
// true, not both or neither.
assert_eq!((a < c) as u8 + (c < a) as u8, 2);The documentation of PartialOrd contains further examples, for example it’s wrong for
PartialOrd and PartialEq to disagree.
Required Methods§
1.0.0 · Sourcefn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering
This method returns an Ordering between self and other.
By convention, self.cmp(&other) returns the ordering matching the expression
self <operator> other if true.
§Examples
use std::cmp::Ordering;
assert_eq!(5.cmp(&10), Ordering::Less);
assert_eq!(10.cmp(&5), Ordering::Greater);
assert_eq!(5.cmp(&5), Ordering::Equal);Provided Methods§
1.21.0 · Sourcefn max(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
Compares and returns the maximum of two values.
Returns the second argument if the comparison determines them to be equal.
§Examples
assert_eq!(1.max(2), 2);
assert_eq!(2.max(2), 2);use std::cmp::Ordering;
#[derive(Eq)]
struct Equal(&'static str);
impl PartialEq for Equal {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool { true }
}
impl PartialOrd for Equal {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> { Some(Ordering::Equal) }
}
impl Ord for Equal {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering { Ordering::Equal }
}
assert_eq!(Equal("self").max(Equal("other")).0, "other");1.21.0 · Sourcefn min(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
fn min(self, other: Self) -> Selfwhere
Self: Sized,
Compares and returns the minimum of two values.
Returns the first argument if the comparison determines them to be equal.
§Examples
assert_eq!(1.min(2), 1);
assert_eq!(2.min(2), 2);use std::cmp::Ordering;
#[derive(Eq)]
struct Equal(&'static str);
impl PartialEq for Equal {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool { true }
}
impl PartialOrd for Equal {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> { Some(Ordering::Equal) }
}
impl Ord for Equal {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering { Ordering::Equal }
}
assert_eq!(Equal("self").min(Equal("other")).0, "self");Dyn Compatibility§
This trait is not dyn compatible.
In older versions of Rust, dyn compatibility was called "object safety", so this trait is not object safe.
Implementors§
impl Ord for AsciiChar
impl Ord for Ordering
impl Ord for Infallible
impl Ord for IpAddr
impl Ord for SocketAddr
impl Ord for ErrorKind
impl Ord for Cfg
impl Ord for CfgExpr
impl Ord for Platform
impl Ord for GitReference
impl Ord for SourceKind
impl Ord for ProfilePackageSpec
impl Ord for TomlDebugInfo
impl Ord for TomlTrimPaths
impl Ord for TomlTrimPathsValue
impl Ord for CrateType
impl Ord for Edition
impl Ord for TargetKind
impl Ord for ExtensionType
impl Ord for GeneralCategory
impl Ord for Level
impl Ord for LevelFilter
impl Ord for serde_value::Value
impl Ord for Month
impl Ord for Offset
impl Ord for bool
impl Ord for char
impl Ord for i8
impl Ord for i16
impl Ord for i32
impl Ord for i64
impl Ord for i128
impl Ord for isize
impl Ord for !
impl Ord for str
Implements ordering of strings.
Strings are ordered lexicographically by their byte values. This orders Unicode code
points based on their positions in the code charts. This is not necessarily the same as
“alphabetical” order, which varies by language and locale. Sorting strings according to
culturally-accepted standards requires locale-specific data that is outside the scope of
the str type.
impl Ord for u8
impl Ord for u16
impl Ord for u32
impl Ord for u64
impl Ord for u128
impl Ord for ()
impl Ord for usize
impl Ord for Error
impl Ord for ByteString
impl Ord for CString
impl Ord for TypeId
impl Ord for ByteStr
impl Ord for CpuidResult
impl Ord for CStr
impl Ord for PhantomPinned
impl Ord for Ipv4Addr
impl Ord for Ipv6Addr
impl Ord for SocketAddrV4
impl Ord for SocketAddrV6
impl Ord for Location<'_>
impl Ord for Alignment
impl Ord for core::time::Duration
impl Ord for OsStr
impl Ord for OsString
impl Ord for Components<'_>
impl Ord for Path
impl Ord for PathBuf
impl Ord for PrefixComponent<'_>
impl Ord for Instant
impl Ord for SystemTime
impl Ord for Utf8Path
impl Ord for Utf8PathBuf
impl Ord for Ident
impl Ord for PackageIdSpec
impl Ord for PartialVersion
impl Ord for RustVersion
impl Ord for StringOrVec
impl Ord for PackageId
impl Ord for Oid
impl Ord for AttrCheckFlags
impl Ord for CheckoutNotificationType
impl Ord for CredentialType
impl Ord for DiffFlags
impl Ord for DiffStatsFormat
impl Ord for IndexAddOption
impl Ord for IndexEntryExtendedFlag
impl Ord for IndexEntryFlag
impl Ord for MergeAnalysis
impl Ord for MergePreference
impl Ord for OdbLookupFlags
impl Ord for PathspecFlags
impl Ord for ReferenceFormat
impl Ord for RemoteUpdateFlags
impl Ord for RepositoryInitMode
impl Ord for RepositoryOpenFlags
impl Ord for RevparseMode
impl Ord for Sort
impl Ord for StashApplyFlags
impl Ord for StashFlags
impl Ord for Status
impl Ord for SubmoduleStatus
impl Ord for IndexTime
impl Ord for git2::time::Time
impl Ord for Other
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::extensions::private::other::Subtag
impl Ord for Private
impl Ord for Fields
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::extensions::transform::key::Key
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::extensions::transform::value::Value
impl Ord for Attribute
impl Ord for Attributes
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::extensions::unicode::key::Key
impl Ord for Keywords
impl Ord for SubdivisionId
impl Ord for SubdivisionSuffix
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::extensions::unicode::value::Value
impl Ord for Language
impl Ord for Region
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::subtags::script::Script
impl Ord for icu_locale_core::subtags::Subtag
impl Ord for Variant
impl Ord for Variants
impl Ord for GeneralCategoryULE
impl Ord for BidiClass
impl Ord for CanonicalCombiningClass
impl Ord for EastAsianWidth
impl Ord for GeneralCategoryOutOfBoundsError
impl Ord for GraphemeClusterBreak
impl Ord for HangulSyllableType
impl Ord for IndicSyllabicCategory
impl Ord for JoiningType
impl Ord for LineBreak
impl Ord for icu_properties::props::Script
impl Ord for SentenceBreak
impl Ord for VerticalOrientation
impl Ord for WordBreak
impl Ord for DataMarkerId
impl Ord for DataMarkerIdHash
impl Ord for DataMarkerInfo
impl Ord for DataMarkerAttributes
impl Ord for DataRequestMetadata
impl Ord for PotentialCodePoint
impl Ord for PotentialUtf8
impl Ord for PotentialUtf16
impl Ord for BuildMetadata
impl Ord for Prerelease
impl Ord for Version
impl Ord for time::date::Date
impl Ord for time::duration::Duration
impl Ord for OffsetDateTime
impl Ord for PrimitiveDateTime
impl Ord for time::time::Time
impl Ord for time::utc_date_time::UtcDateTime
impl Ord for UtcOffset
impl Ord for toml_datetime::datetime::Date
impl Ord for Datetime
impl Ord for toml_datetime::datetime::Time
impl Ord for InternalString
impl Ord for toml_edit::key::Key
impl Ord for ConstTypeId
impl Ord for tz::datetime::UtcDateTime
impl Ord for Url
URLs compare like their serialization.
impl Ord for BStr
impl Ord for Bytes
impl Ord for CharULE
impl Ord for Index8
impl Ord for Index16
impl Ord for Index32
impl Ord for String
impl<'a> Ord for Component<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for Prefix<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for Utf8Component<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for Utf8Prefix<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for PhantomContravariantLifetime<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for PhantomCovariantLifetime<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for PhantomInvariantLifetime<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for Utf8Components<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for Utf8PrefixComponent<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for TreeEntry<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for Metadata<'a>
impl<'a> Ord for MetadataBuilder<'a>
impl<'a, T> Ord for ZeroVec<'a, T>
impl<'a, T, F> Ord for VarZeroVec<'a, T, F>
impl<'a, V> Ord for VarZeroCow<'a, V>
impl<'k> Ord for KeyMut<'k>
impl<'repo> Ord for Reference<'repo>
impl<'s> Ord for TomlKey<'s>
impl<'s> Ord for TomlString<'s>
impl<A> Ord for &A
impl<A> Ord for &mut A
impl<A> Ord for SmallVec<A>
impl<A, B> Ord for Tuple2ULE<A, B>
impl<A, B> Ord for VarTuple<A, B>
impl<A, B, C> Ord for Tuple3ULE<A, B, C>
impl<A, B, C, D> Ord for Tuple4ULE<A, B, C, D>
impl<A, B, C, D, E> Ord for Tuple5ULE<A, B, C, D, E>
impl<A, B, C, D, E, F> Ord for Tuple6ULE<A, B, C, D, E, F>
impl<A, B, C, D, E, F, Format> Ord for Tuple6VarULE<A, B, C, D, E, F, Format>
impl<A, B, C, D, E, Format> Ord for Tuple5VarULE<A, B, C, D, E, Format>
impl<A, B, C, D, Format> Ord for Tuple4VarULE<A, B, C, D, Format>
impl<A, B, C, Format> Ord for Tuple3VarULE<A, B, C, Format>
impl<A, B, Format> Ord for Tuple2VarULE<A, B, Format>
impl<A, V> Ord for VarTupleULE<A, V>
impl<B> Ord for Cow<'_, B>
impl<Dyn> Ord for DynMetadata<Dyn>where
Dyn: ?Sized,
impl<F> Ord for Fwhere
F: FnPtr,
impl<I> Ord for LocatingSlice<I>where
I: Ord,
impl<I> Ord for Partial<I>where
I: Ord,
impl<K, V> Ord for indexmap::map::slice::Slice<K, V>
impl<K, V, A> Ord for BTreeMap<K, V, A>
impl<K, V, S> Ord for LiteMap<K, V, S>
impl<Ptr> Ord for Pin<Ptr>
impl<S> Ord for Host<S>where
S: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for Option<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for Poll<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for *const Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Pointer comparison is by address, as produced by the [<*const T>::addr](pointer::addr) method.
impl<T> Ord for *mut Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Pointer comparison is by address, as produced by the <*mut T>::addr method.
impl<T> Ord for [T]where
T: Ord,
Implements comparison of slices lexicographically.
impl<T> Ord for (T₁, T₂, …, Tₙ)where
T: Ord,
This trait is implemented for tuples up to twelve items long.
impl<T> Ord for Cell<T>
impl<T> Ord for RefCell<T>
impl<T> Ord for Reverse<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for PhantomData<T>where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Ord for PhantomContravariant<T>where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Ord for PhantomCovariant<T>where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Ord for PhantomInvariant<T>where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Ord for ManuallyDrop<T>
impl<T> Ord for NonZero<T>where
T: ZeroablePrimitive + Ord,
impl<T> Ord for Saturating<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for Wrapping<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for NonNull<T>where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> Ord for Exclusive<T>
impl<T> Ord for FeatureName<T>
impl<T> Ord for PackageName<T>
impl<T> Ord for PathBaseName<T>
impl<T> Ord for ProfileName<T>
impl<T> Ord for RegistryName<T>
impl<T> Ord for indexmap::set::slice::Slice<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for NotNan<T>where
T: Float,
impl<T> Ord for OrderedFloat<T>where
T: Float,
impl<T> Ord for Spanned<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for TryWriteableInfallibleAsWriteable<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for WriteableAsTryWriteableInfallible<T>where
T: Ord,
impl<T> Ord for ZeroSlice<T>
impl<T, A> Ord for BTreeSet<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for LinkedList<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for VecDeque<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for Rc<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for UniqueRc<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for Arc<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for UniqueArc<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for Box<T, A>
impl<T, A> Ord for Vec<T, A>
Implements ordering of vectors, lexicographically.
impl<T, E> Ord for Result<T, E>
impl<T, F> Ord for VarZeroSlice<T, F>
impl<T, S> Ord for Checkpoint<T, S>where
T: Ord,
impl<T, const N: usize> Ord for [T; N]where
T: Ord,
Implements comparison of arrays lexicographically.
impl<T, const N: usize> Ord for Simd<T, N>
Lexicographic order. For the SIMD elementwise minimum and maximum, use simd_min and simd_max instead.