arrays/slices
Like tuples, arrays and slices can be destructured this way:
fn main() { // Try changing the values in the array, or make it a slice! let array = [1, -2, 6]; match array { // Binds the second and the third elements to the respective variables [0, second, third] => println!("array[0] = 0, array[1] = {}, array[2] = {}", second, third), // Single values can be ignored with _ [1, _, third] => println!( "array[0] = 1, array[2] = {} and array[1] was ignored", third ), // You can also bind some and ignore the rest [-1, second, ..] => println!( "array[0] = -1, array[1] = {} and all the other ones were ignored", second ), // The code below would not compile // [-1, second] => ... // Or store them in another array/slice (the type depends on // that of the value that is being matched against) [3, second, tail @ ..] => println!( "array[0] = 3, array[1] = {} and the other elements were {:?}", second, tail ), // Combining these patterns, we can, for example, bind the first and // last values, and store the rest of them in a single array [first, middle @ .., last] => println!( "array[0] = {}, middle = {:?}, array[2] = {}", first, middle, last ), } }
See also:
Arrays and Slices and Binding for @
sigil