Function tracing_core::stdlib::convert::identity
1.33.0 (const: 1.33.0) · source · pub const fn identity<T>(x: T) -> T
Expand description
The identity function.
Two things are important to note about this function:
-
It is not always equivalent to a closure like
|x| x
, since the closure may coercex
into a different type. -
It moves the input
x
passed to the function.
While it might seem strange to have a function that just returns back the input, there are some interesting uses.
§Examples
Using identity
to do nothing in a sequence of other, interesting,
functions:
use std::convert::identity;
fn manipulation(x: u32) -> u32 {
// Let's pretend that adding one is an interesting function.
x + 1
}
let _arr = &[identity, manipulation];
Using identity
as a “do nothing” base case in a conditional:
use std::convert::identity;
let do_stuff = if condition { manipulation } else { identity };
// Do more interesting stuff...
let _results = do_stuff(42);
Using identity
to keep the Some
variants of an iterator of Option<T>
:
use std::convert::identity;
let iter = [Some(1), None, Some(3)].into_iter();
let filtered = iter.filter_map(identity).collect::<Vec<_>>();
assert_eq!(vec![1, 3], filtered);