Rust for Java Devs – Structs
Next up in Rust for Java Devs we have structs. They are used to hold data within a logical unit that can be passed to other functions or execute their own methods on the values that they store. Now this sounds very familiar… Java objects do the same thing. For example if you took a POJO (Plain Old Java Object) you also pass it to other methods or execute the object’s own methods. In this nature they are alike, but they do have their differences. In this post we will look into creating structs, retrieving their values, defining their own methods and how to execute them.
Creating a struct
Let’s start with creating a struct.
struct Person { first_name: String, last_name: String, age: u32, weight: u32, height: u32, }
Thats all there is to it. The name of the struct is Person
which has 5 fields inside of it. The nice thing about how structs work compared to Java’s objects is that no constructor equivalent needs to be defined to create struct (until accessability is taken into account). You simply list out the fields and it will just work.
Let’s quickly compare the above Rust struct to a Java object.
class Person { private String firstName; private String lastName; private int age; private int weight; private int height; Person(String firstName, String lastName, int age, int weight, int height) { this.firstName = firstName; this.lastName = lastName; this.age = age; this.weight = weight; this.height = height; } }
I’m sure the first thing you will notice is the much greater amount of code that is needed to achieve the same goal. We needed to first list the fields / properties and then write a constructor to create the object.
There are actually still a few more differences between the two just from these two snippets but we’ll get to those in a minute. This amount of extra code (boilerplate code) is one of the main criticisms that people have with Java… Leading to the most common word that I hear about Java being “verbose”.
So now we have defined a struct, how do we instantiate one to use in our code? Quite simple really.
let person = Person { first_name: String::from("John"), last_name: String::from("Doe"), age: 50, weight: 200, height: 180, };
This looks deceptively like the definition of the struct itself. But this time rather than stating what data type is being used for each field we have passed values instead.
And now in Java.
Person person = new Person("John", "Doe", 50, 200, 180);
As you can see the names of the fields have been omitted from the code when compared to Rust’s structs. This can lead to Java constructors being slightly more difficult to use if there are lots of parameters of the same type as you could mistakenly order the input values and thus creating an object with incorrect values. A possible solution for this is to use the Builder pattern instead of using a constructor directly.
I mentioned above there are a few more differences between the struct and object that we defined earlier, so let’s look at them.
What if I want to pass in values into a struct in a different order to how the fields are listed? Easy, the order doesn’t matter.
let person = Person { age: 50, first_name: String::from("John"), height: 180, weight: 200, last_name: String::from("Doe"), };
What if I wanted to only define some fields? Mmmm, well your out of luck there. All fields need to be initialized when a struct is created. If we tried to compile the code below.
let person = Person { first_name: String::from("John"), };
The compiler will output.
error[E0063]: missing fields `age`, `height`, `last_name` and 1 other field in initializer of `Person` --> src\main.rs:2:16 | 2 | let person = Person { | ^^^^^^ missing `age`, `height`, `last_name` and 1 other field error: aborting due to previous error
The error is self explanatory and states what / how many fields are missing. This is a decision Rust has made to make the language safer as it removes the possibility of a Null Pointer Exception / Error popping up as every value has to be set. Java does not have this requirement which can lead to null pointers occurring at run time from using an object’s value that is still null
.
How do the two points mentioned above differ from Java? In Java, you can input parameters into a constructor in different orders and you also don’t need to initialize every field in the object. But, this comes with a catch. You need to create a new constructor for each order or number of parameters that you wish to pass in, or as I mentioned earlier, you could use the Builder pattern.
For example if we wanted to write constructors that would allow the two Rust snippets above to work, we would write.
class Person { // fields Person(String firstName, String lastName, int age, int weight, int height) { // original constructor } Person(int age, String firstName, int height, int weight, String lastName) { // set values } Person(String firstName) { // set firstName } }
A Person
object can now be instantiated 3 different ways, although the last constructor is a bit risky due to null
values on most of the fields and could lead to null pointer exceptions.
Accessing struct values
Next up, we will look at retrieving values from a struct.
let first_name = person.first_name;
Thats about it. Whereas in Java you would write.
String firstName = person.firstName;
This snippet relies on the firstName
field being public, but this is considered bad practice in Java so you would normally write the below instead.
String firstName = person.getFirstName();
This allows you to keep firstName
private which provides you the flexibility to change the internals of the object without breaking existing code as long as the getFirstName
is still available.
From my understanding of Rust structs, struct fields are private by default within a module (I know I haven’t gone through modules yet). So if we make this simpler, if we ran the last Rust snippet in the same file as the struct was defined, it would work, if it was in a different file it would not. To make the fields publicly accessible we need to add the pub
modifier onto each field, like so.
pub struct Person { pub first_name: String, pub last_name: String, age: u32, weight: u32, height: u32, }
Here, pub
was added onto the struct itself so it can be referenced from outside the module. The fields first_name
and last_name
are also marked with pub
making them the only fields that could be used outside of the module when using the Person
struct. This actually causes a problem, we have only 2 public fields, so when we go to construct a new Person
instance, it will fail. This is the double edged sword of accessibility, if we want to hide some fields to prevent access it also means we can’t pass values into them on construction, because technically we don’t “know” about them. We will look at getting past this barrier later on.
If we tried to create an instance of the struct shown above from outside it’s module, we would get the following error.
error[E0451]: field `age` of struct `blog_post_sandbox::people::Person` is private --> src\main.rs:8:5 | 8 | age: 50, | ^^^^^^^ field `age` is private error[E0451]: field `weight` of struct `blog_post_sandbox::people::Person` is private --> src\main.rs:9:5 | 9 | weight: 200, | ^^^^^^^^^^^ field `weight` is private error[E0451]: field `height` of struct `blog_post_sandbox::people::Person` is private --> src\main.rs:10:5 | 10 | height: 180, | ^^^^^^^^^^^ field `height` is private error: aborting due to 3 previous errors
Mutability
If you wanted to change the value of a struct field after it’s original creation, it must be marked with mut
making it mutable. In Rust you cannot choose which fields are mutable and which are not, either all fields are mutable or none are.
let mut person = Person { first_name: String::from("John"), last_name: String::from("Doe"), age: 50, weight: 200, height: 180, }; person.first_name = String::from("Bob");
This will compile and when ran will change the first_name
fields value from “John” to “Bob”.
Just to prove I’m not lying, if we omitted the mut
keyword and wrote the below instead.
let person = Person { first_name: String::from("John"), last_name: String::from("Doe"), age: 50, weight: 200, height: 180, }; person.first_name = String::from("Bob");
You would get the following compiler error.
error[E0594]: cannot assign to immutable field `person.first_name` --> src\main.rs:9:3 | 2 | let person = Person { | ------ consider changing this to `mut person` ... 9 | person.first_name = String::from("Bob"); | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ cannot mutably borrow immutable field error: aborting due to previous error
Comparing this to Java, we would normally use a setter if we wanted to make changes to our objects. Like so.
person.setFirstName("Bob");
Using setters also makes it easy to control which fields we wish to be mutable. If we don’t create a setter and the field is private, then the field’s value can’t change. Simple.
Methods and Associated Functions
We have now got to the point where we can make our structs actually do things.
I personally think how methods are written in Rust are very different to those in Java. You can form your own opinion once we have gone through this section.
To define methods in Rust we first need to create an implementation block.
struct Person { first_name: String, last_name: String, age: u32, weight: u32, height: u32, } impl Person { // methods go here }
It looks almost the same as the code we have seen throughout this post but with the addition of an implementation block that is created using the impl
keyword along with the struct’s name (in this case Person
).
Now we can start adding some methods into the block. I will omit the creation of the struct’s fields from code snippets for now.
impl Person { pub fn full_name(&self) -> String { [&self.first_name.to_string(), " ", &self.last_name.to_string()].concat() } }
Here we have a method that is tied to the struct that it is invoked on. &self
is what distinguishes this as an instance method as it has access to it’s own values. self
and &mut self
can be used instead while keeping it as an instance method. I still need to go into what these syntaxes mean, but in short, &self
allows you to use the struct’s own values without effecting any other code (doesn’t take ownership of the Person
instance), &mut self
is the same but allows changes to the instance and self
prevents any code that occurs after the method is invoked to use the Person
instance that was used. Some of this might sound confusing, but that’s due to my bad ordering of writing these posts… I should probably write about ownership sometime soon.
The method has also been marked with pub
so it can be used outside of it’s module, it can be removed if access should be more restrictive.
In general, it looks very similar to normal a Rust function.
To call the this method we need to write.
let full_name = person.full_name();
The &self
reference is taken as the person
instance and does not need to be passed into the method manually. If we wanted to pass in another parameter into a method, it would look like.
impl Person { pub fn full_name_with_random_parameter(&self, random_parameter: &str) -> String { [&self.first_name.to_string(), " ", &self.last_name.to_string(), " ", random_parameter].concat() } }
And invoked by.
let random_full_name = person.full_name_with_random_parameter("I'm a string");
If we take a moment to compare Rust’s instance methods to Java’s the biggest difference is the passing in of &self
into the method to be able to access it’s fields. In Java you can access an object’s owns fields directly or by using the this
keyword (like &self
is used in Rust) and does not require any sort of reference to itself to be passed in as a parameter.
The above method would simply look like this when written in Java.
public String fullNameWithRandomParameter(final String randomParameter) { return firstName + " " + lastName + randomParameter; }
or
public String fullNameWithRandomParameter(final String randomParameter) { return this.firstName + " " + this.lastName + randomParameter; }
So if we pass in &self
into a method it becomes an instance method, then what happens if we don’t? Well, technically they become functions instead of methods, associated functions to be precise because they are functions that are “associated” to a struct (such a helpful explanation…). They don’t require an instance to be invoked which might sound familiar coming from Java. That’s right (I’ll assume figured it out), they are like Java’s static methods.
So let’s look at an example.
impl Person { pub fn new(first_name: String, last_name: String, age: u32, weight: u32, height: u32) -> Person { Person { first_name: first_name, last_name: last_name, age: age, weight: weight, height: height, } } }
This method is effectively a constructor to create a new Person
instance from outside of the Person
‘s module. If you recall to earlier in this post (actually quite long ago now), I mentioned that if any struct fields are private then code outside of it’s module cannot create any instances of the struct… Well, this is the solution. By using a public constructor function we can still control accessability without restricting where instances can be created.
Comparing this function to the methods we looked at previously, the only real difference is that there is no reference to &self
and therefore no instance tied to the function.
Calling an associated function is a little different from a struct method.
let person = Person::new(String::from("John"), String::from("Doe"), 50, 200, 180);
As the function is not related to an instance it uses the struct’s type of Person
to invoke the function. Another difference is the ::
syntax used to execute it instead of the typical .
for an instance method. Using this information we can now classify that String::from
which has been used in most of the Rust examples in this post is an associated function. Allowing a new String
struct to be created from a &str
string because the struct’s single field is not publicly available.
As a Java static method is the equivalent of associated function, let’s take a look at one.
public static void create(final String firstName, final String lastName, final int age, final int weight, final int height) { return new Person(firstName, lastName, age, weight, height); }
Nothing particularly interesting to say about this, except for the name of the method. I needed to name this method create
rather than new
like in the Rust version, because new
is a keyword in Java for creating new instances via constructors.
One nice feature before we finish. When creating a struct, if you have a variable whose name matches a struct’s field directly, it’s value will be passed in without a need to directly assign the value to the field. I can’t think of a nice way to explain it in English, so we will use the language we understand better, code!
impl Person { pub fn new(first_name: String, last_name: String, age: u32, weight: u32, input_height: u32) -> Person { Person { first_name, last_name, age, weight, height: input_height, } } }
As you can see first_name
, last_name
, age
and weight
are passed in as parameters whose values are then used directly in creating the Person
struct. input_height
does not match up and therefore still needs to be passed in manually. This cannot be done in Java so there is nothing to compare it to.
Finally, we have made it to the end… That was a lot longer than I was expecting it to be.
In conclusion Rust structs are like Java’s objects, allowing us to group together data within a logical unit. Methods can then be invoked on the data held inside a struct instance but remember to add a &self
reference or it won’t work. We also have associated functions that don’t require an instance and can be used to construct a struct instance without access to it’s private fields. We can also access data from a struct but we need to make sure we actually have access to the fields we are interested in.
There is definitely a lot of stuff in this post and I appreciate that it probably took a while to go through it all. If you found this post helpful then maybe my previous Rust for Java Devs posts will also provide value. As always, please share this post if you liked it and follow me on twitter at @LankyDanDev to keep up with my new posts as I write them.
Published on Web Code Geeks with permission by Dan Newton, partner at our WCG program. See the original article here: Rust for Java Devs – Structs Opinions expressed by Web Code Geeks contributors are their own. |