Macro itertools::chain [−][src]
macro_rules! chain {
() => { ... };
($first : expr $(, $rest : expr) * $(,) ?) => { ... };
}
Expand description
Chain zero or more iterators together into one sequence.
The comma-separated arguments must implement IntoIterator
.
The final argument may be followed by a trailing comma.
Examples
Empty invocations of chain!
expand to an invocation of std::iter::empty
:
use std::iter;
use itertools::chain;
let _: iter::Empty<()> = chain!();
let _: iter::Empty<i8> = chain!();
Invocations of chain!
with one argument expand to arg.into_iter()
:
use std::{ops::Range, slice};
use itertools::chain;
let _: <Range<_> as IntoIterator>::IntoIter = chain!((2..6),); // trailing comma optional!
let _: <&[_] as IntoIterator>::IntoIter = chain!(&[2, 3, 4]);
Invocations of chain!
with multiple arguments .into_iter()
each
argument, and then chain
them together:
use std::{iter::*, ops::Range, slice};
use itertools::{assert_equal, chain};
// e.g., this:
let with_macro: Chain<Chain<Once<_>, Take<Repeat<_>>>, slice::Iter<_>> =
chain![once(&0), repeat(&1).take(2), &[2, 3, 5],];
// ...is equivalant to this:
let with_method: Chain<Chain<Once<_>, Take<Repeat<_>>>, slice::Iter<_>> =
once(&0)
.chain(repeat(&1).take(2))
.chain(&[2, 3, 5]);
assert_equal(with_macro, with_method);