#[non_exhaustive]pub enum Pat {
Show 17 variants
Const(ExprConst),
Ident(PatIdent),
Lit(ExprLit),
Macro(ExprMacro),
Or(PatOr),
Paren(PatParen),
Path(ExprPath),
Range(ExprRange),
Reference(PatReference),
Rest(PatRest),
Slice(PatSlice),
Struct(PatStruct),
Tuple(PatTuple),
TupleStruct(PatTupleStruct),
Type(PatType),
Verbatim(TokenStream),
Wild(PatWild),
}
Expand description
A pattern in a local binding, function signature, match expression, or various other places.
§Syntax tree enum
This type is a syntax tree enum.
Variants (Non-exhaustive)§
This enum is marked as non-exhaustive
Const(ExprConst)
A const block: const { ... }
.
Ident(PatIdent)
A pattern that binds a new variable: ref mut binding @ SUBPATTERN
.
Lit(ExprLit)
A literal pattern: 0
.
Macro(ExprMacro)
A macro in pattern position.
Or(PatOr)
A pattern that matches any one of a set of cases.
Paren(PatParen)
A parenthesized pattern: (A | B)
.
Path(ExprPath)
A path pattern like Color::Red
, optionally qualified with a
self-type.
Unqualified path patterns can legally refer to variants, structs,
constants or associated constants. Qualified path patterns like
<A>::B::C
and <A as Trait>::B::C
can only legally refer to
associated constants.
Range(ExprRange)
A range pattern: 1..=2
.
Reference(PatReference)
A reference pattern: &mut var
.
Rest(PatRest)
The dots in a tuple or slice pattern: [0, 1, ..]
.
Slice(PatSlice)
A dynamically sized slice pattern: [a, b, ref i @ .., y, z]
.
Struct(PatStruct)
A struct or struct variant pattern: Variant { x, y, .. }
.
Tuple(PatTuple)
A tuple pattern: (a, b)
.
TupleStruct(PatTupleStruct)
A tuple struct or tuple variant pattern: Variant(x, y, .., z)
.
Type(PatType)
A type ascription pattern: foo: f64
.
Verbatim(TokenStream)
Tokens in pattern position not interpreted by Syn.
Wild(PatWild)
A pattern that matches any value: _
.
Implementations§
Source§impl Pat
impl Pat
Sourcepub fn parse_single(input: &ParseBuffer<'_>) -> Result<Pat, Error>
pub fn parse_single(input: &ParseBuffer<'_>) -> Result<Pat, Error>
Parse a pattern that does not involve |
at the top level.
This parser matches the behavior of the $:pat_param
macro_rules
matcher, and on editions prior to Rust 2021, the behavior of
$:pat
.
In Rust syntax, some examples of where this syntax would occur are
in the argument pattern of functions and closures. Patterns using
|
are not allowed to occur in these positions.
fn f(Some(_) | None: Option<T>) {
let _ = |Some(_) | None: Option<T>| {};
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^??? :(
}
error: top-level or-patterns are not allowed in function parameters
--> src/main.rs:1:6
|
1 | fn f(Some(_) | None: Option<T>) {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: wrap the pattern in parentheses: `(Some(_) | None)`
Sourcepub fn parse_multi(input: &ParseBuffer<'_>) -> Result<Pat, Error>
pub fn parse_multi(input: &ParseBuffer<'_>) -> Result<Pat, Error>
Parse a pattern, possibly involving |
, but not a leading |
.
Sourcepub fn parse_multi_with_leading_vert(
input: &ParseBuffer<'_>,
) -> Result<Pat, Error>
pub fn parse_multi_with_leading_vert( input: &ParseBuffer<'_>, ) -> Result<Pat, Error>
Parse a pattern, possibly involving |
, possibly including a
leading |
.
This parser matches the behavior of the Rust 2021 edition’s $:pat
macro_rules matcher.
In Rust syntax, an example of where this syntax would occur is in
the pattern of a match
arm, where the language permits an optional
leading |
, although it is not idiomatic to write one there in
handwritten code.
match wat {
| None | Some(false) => {}
| Some(true) => {}
}
The compiler accepts it only to facilitate some situations in macro-generated code where a macro author might need to write:
match $value {
$(| $conditions1)* $(| $conditions2)* => $then
}
Expressing the same thing correctly in the case that either one (but
not both) of $conditions1
and $conditions2
might be empty,
without leading |
, is complex.
Use Pat::parse_multi
instead if you are not intending to support
macro-generated macro input.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl From<PatReference> for Pat
impl From<PatReference> for Pat
Source§fn from(e: PatReference) -> Pat
fn from(e: PatReference) -> Pat
Source§impl From<PatTupleStruct> for Pat
impl From<PatTupleStruct> for Pat
Source§fn from(e: PatTupleStruct) -> Pat
fn from(e: PatTupleStruct) -> Pat
Source§impl ToTokens for Pat
impl ToTokens for Pat
Source§fn to_tokens(&self, tokens: &mut TokenStream)
fn to_tokens(&self, tokens: &mut TokenStream)
Source§fn to_token_stream(&self) -> TokenStream
fn to_token_stream(&self) -> TokenStream
Source§fn into_token_stream(self) -> TokenStreamwhere
Self: Sized,
fn into_token_stream(self) -> TokenStreamwhere
Self: Sized,
impl Eq for Pat
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for Pat
impl RefUnwindSafe for Pat
impl !Send for Pat
impl !Sync for Pat
impl Unpin for Pat
impl UnwindSafe for Pat
Blanket Implementations§
Source§impl<T> AstItemExt for Twhere
T: ToTokens,
impl<T> AstItemExt for Twhere
T: ToTokens,
fn respanned(&self, span: Span) -> Twhere
T: Parse,
fn respanned_tokens(&self, span: Span) -> TokenStream
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T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
Source§fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
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T: Clone,
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T: Clone,
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impl<T> Paint for Twhere
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Returns a styled value derived from self
with the foreground set to
value
.
This method should be used rarely. Instead, prefer to use color-specific
builder methods like red()
and
green()
, which have the same functionality but are
pithier.
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Returns self
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Color::BrightBlack
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fn bright_green(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Returns self
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Color::BrightGreen
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fn bright_yellow(&self) -> Painted<&T>
Returns self
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