[][src]Crate sloth

This crate provides a generic pointer-like Lazy<T, Eval> struct for lazily initialized values. It can be used for expensive-to-calculate values to ensure that the evaluation logic runs only once and only if needed.

For example:

use sloth::Lazy;
 
fn get_expensive_string() -> String {
    // do something expensive here to obtain the result,
    // such as read and process file contents
    String::from("some expensive string we got from a file or something")
}
 
fn get_expensive_number() -> i32 {
    // do something expensive here to calculate the result,
    // such as build a supercomputer and wait 7.5 million years
    42
}
 
let lazy_string = Lazy::new(get_expensive_string);
let lazy_number = Lazy::new(get_expensive_number);
 
//...
let must_use_string = true;
//...
 
if must_use_string {
    println!("Expensive string is: {}", *lazy_string);
    println!("It has length: {}", lazy_string.len());

    // get_expensive_string() has been called only once,
    // get_expensive_number() has not been called
} else {
    println!("Expensive number is: {}", *lazy_number);
    println!("Its square is {}", lazy_number.pow(2));
 
    // get_expensive_string() has not been called,
    // get_expensive_number() has been called only once
}
 

The evaluated value of a mutable Lazy can be modified:

use sloth::Lazy;
 
let mut lazy_vec = Lazy::new(|| vec![2, -5, 6, 0]);
 
lazy_vec.retain(|n| *n > 0);
 
assert_eq!(*lazy_vec, vec![2, 6]);

Lazy can be consumed and turned into its value via unwrap():

use sloth::Lazy;
 
let lazy_value = Lazy::new(|| "moo");
 
let output = String::from("a cow goes ") + lazy_value.unwrap();

Structs

Lazy

Contains a value of some type T, lazily evaluated using a parameterless function or a closure (FnOnce() -> T) passed to Lazy::new().