[TOC] ## Appendix B: Operators and Symbols This appendix contains a glossary of Rust’s syntax, including operators and other symbols that appear by themselves or in the context of paths, generics, trait bounds, macros, attributes, comments, tuples, and brackets. ## Operators Table B-1 contains the operators in Rust, an example of how the operator would appear in context, a short explanation, and whether that operator is overloadable. If an operator is overloadable, the relevant trait to use to overload that operator is listed. Table B-1: Operators | Operator | Example | Explanation | Overloadable? | |---|---|---|---| | `!` | `ident!(...)`, `ident!{...}`, `ident![...]` | Macro expansion | | | `!` | `!expr` | Bitwise or logical complement | `Not` | | `!=` | `expr != expr` | Nonequality comparison | `PartialEq` | | `%` | `expr % expr` | Arithmetic remainder | `Rem` | | `%=` | `var %= expr` | Arithmetic remainder and assignment | `RemAssign` | | `&` | `&expr`, `&mut expr` | Borrow | | | `&` | `&type`, `&mut type`, `&'a type`, `&'a mut type` | Borrowed pointer type | | | `&` | `expr & expr` | Bitwise AND | `BitAnd` | | `&=` | `var &= expr` | Bitwise AND and assignment | `BitAndAssign` | | `&&` | `expr && expr` | Short-circuiting logical AND | | | `*` | `expr * expr` | Arithmetic multiplication | `Mul` | | `*=` | `var *= expr` | Arithmetic multiplication and assignment | `MulAssign` | | `*` | `*expr` | Dereference | `Deref` | | `*` | `*const type`, `*mut type` | Raw pointer | | | `+` | `trait + trait`, `'a + trait` | Compound type constraint | | | `+` | `expr + expr` | Arithmetic addition | `Add` | | `+=` | `var += expr` | Arithmetic addition and assignment | `AddAssign` | | `,` | `expr, expr` | Argument and element separator | | | `-` | `- expr` | Arithmetic negation | `Neg` | | `-` | `expr - expr` | Arithmetic subtraction | `Sub` | | `-=` | `var -= expr` | Arithmetic subtraction and assignment | `SubAssign` | | `->` | `fn(...) -> type`, `|…| -> type` | Function and closure return type | | | `. | `expr.ident` | Member access | | | `..` | `..`, `expr..`, `..expr`, `expr..expr` | Right-exclusive range literal | `PartialOrd` | | `..=` | `..=expr`, `expr..=expr` | Right-inclusive range literal | `PartialOrd` | | `..` | `..expr` | Struct literal update syntax | | | `..` | `variant(x, ..)`, `struct_type { x, .. }` | “And the rest” pattern binding | | | `...` | `expr...expr` | (Deprecated, use `..=` instead) In a pattern: inclusive range pattern | | | `/` | `expr / expr` | Arithmetic division | `Div` | | `/=` | `var /= expr` | Arithmetic division and assignment | `DivAssign` | | `: | `pat: type`, `ident: type` | Constraints | | | `:` | `ident: expr` | Struct field initializer | | | `:` | `'a: loop {...}` | Loop label | | | `;` | `expr;` | Statement and item terminator | | | `;` | `[...; len]` | Part of fixed-size array syntax | | | `<<` | `expr << expr` | Left-shift | `Shl` | | `<<=` | `var <<= expr` | Left-shift and assignment | `ShlAssign` | | `<` | `expr < expr` | Less than comparison | `PartialOrd` | | `<=` | `expr <= expr` | Less than or equal to comparison | `PartialOrd` | | `=` | `var = expr`, `ident = type` | Assignment/equivalence | | | `==` | `expr == expr` | Equality comparison | `PartialEq` | | `=>` | `pat => expr` | Part of match arm syntax | | | `>` | `expr > expr` | Greater than comparison | `PartialOrd` | | `>=` | `expr >= expr` | Greater than or equal to comparison | `PartialOrd` | | `>>` | `expr >> expr` | Right-shift | `Shr` | | `>>=` | `var >>= expr` | Right-shift and assignment | `ShrAssign` | | `@` | `ident @ pat` | Pattern binding | | | `^` | `expr ^ expr` | Bitwise exclusive OR | `BitXor` | | `^=` | `var ^= expr` | Bitwise exclusive OR and assignment | `BitXorAssign` | | `|` | `pat | pat` | Pattern alternatives | | | `|` | `expr | expr` | Bitwise OR | `BitOr` | | `|=` | `var |= expr` | Bitwise OR and assignment | `BitOrAssign` | | `||` | `expr || expr` | Short-circuiting logical OR | | | `?` | `expr?` | Error propagation | | ## Non-operator Symbols The following tables contain all symbols that don’t function as operators; that is, they don’t behave like a function or method call. Table B-2 shows symbols that appear on their own and are valid in a variety of locations. Table B-2: Stand-Alone Syntax | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | `'ident` | Named lifetime or loop label | | `...u8`, `...i32`, `...f64`, `...usize`, and so on | Numeric literal of specific type | | `"..."` | String literal | | `r"..."`, `r#"..."#`, `r##"..."##`, and so on | Raw string literal; escape characters not processed | | `b"..."` | Byte string literal; constructs an array of bytes instead of a string | | `br"..."`, `br#"..."#`, `br##"..."##`, and so on | Raw byte string literal; combination of raw and byte string literal | | `'...'` | Character literal | | `b'...'` | ASCII byte literal | | `|…| expr` | Closure | | `!` | Always-empty bottom type for diverging functions | | `_` | “Ignored” pattern binding; also used to make integer literals readable | Table B-3 shows symbols that appear in the context of a path through the module hierarchy to an item. Table B-3: Path-Related Syntax | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | `ident::ident` | Namespace path | | `::path` | Path relative to the crate root (that is, an explicitly absolute path) | | `self::path` | Path relative to the current module (that is, an explicitly relative path) | | `super::path` | Path relative to the parent of the current module | | `type::ident`, `::ident` | Associated constants, functions, and types | | `::...` | Associated item for a type that cannot be directly named (for example, `<&T>::...`, `<[T]>::...`, and so on) | | `trait::method(...)` | Disambiguating a method call by naming the trait that defines it | | `type::method(...)` | Disambiguating a method call by naming the type for which it’s defined | | `::method(...)` | Disambiguating a method call by naming the trait and type | Table B-4 shows symbols that appear in the context of using generic type parameters. Table B-4: Generics | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | `path<...>` | Specifies parameters to a generic type in a type (for example, `Vec`) | | `path::<...>, method::<...>` | Specifies parameters to a generic type, function, or method in an expression; often referred to as turbofish (for example, `"42".parse::()`) | | `fn ident<...> ...` | Define generic function | | `struct ident<...> ...` | Define generic structure | | `enum ident<...> ...` | Define generic enumeration | | `impl<...> ...` | Define generic implementation | | `for<...> type` | Higher-ranked lifetime bounds | | `type` | A generic type where one or more associated types have specific assignments (for example, `Iterator`) | Table B-5 shows symbols that appear in the context of constraining generic type parameters with trait bounds. Table B-5: Trait Bound Constraints | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | T: U` | Generic parameter `T` constrained to types that implement `U` | | `T: 'a` | Generic type `T` must outlive lifetime `'a` (meaning the type cannot transitively contain any references with lifetimes shorter than `'a`) | | `T: 'static` | Generic type `T` contains no borrowed references other than `'static` ones | | `'b: 'a` | Generic lifetime `'b` must outlive lifetime `'a` | | `T: ?Sized` | Allow generic type parameter to be a dynamically sized type | | `'a + trait`, `trait + trait` | Compound type constraint | Table B-6 shows symbols that appear in the context of calling or defining macros and specifying attributes on an item. Table B-6: Macros and Attributes | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | `#[meta]` | Outer attribute | | `#![meta]` | Inner attribute | | `$ident` | Macro substitution | | `$ident:kind` | Macro capture | | `$(…)…` | Macro repetition | | `ident!(...)`, `ident!{...}`, `ident![...]` | Macro invocation | Table B-7 shows symbols that create comments. Table B-7: Comments | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | `//` | Line comment | | `//!` | Inner line doc comment | | `///` | Outer line doc comment | | `/*...*/` | Block comment | | `/*!...*/` | Inner block doc comment | | `/**...*/` | Outer block doc comment | Table B-8 shows symbols that appear in the context of using tuples. Table B-8: Tuples | Symbol | Explanation | |---|---| | `()` | Empty tuple (aka unit), both literal and type | | `(expr)` | Parenthesized expression | | `(expr,)` | Single-element tuple expression | | `(type,)` | Single-element tuple type | | `(expr, ...)` | Tuple expression | | `(type, ...)` | Tuple type | | `expr(expr, ...)` | Function call expression; also used to initialize tuple `struct`s and tuple `enum` variants | | `expr.0`, `expr.1`, and so on | Tuple indexing | Table B-9 shows the contexts in which curly brackets are used. Table B-9: Curly Brackets | Context | Explanation | |---|---| | `{...}` | Block expression | | `Type {...}` | `struct` literal | Table B-10 shows the contexts in which square brackets are used. Table B-10: Square Brackets | Context | Explanation | |---|---| | `[...]` | Array literal | | `[expr; len]` | Array literal containing `len` copies of `expr` | | `[type; len]` | Array type containing `len` instances of `type` | | `expr[expr]` | Collection indexing; overloadable (`Index`, `IndexMut`) | | `expr[..]`, `expr[a..]`, `expr[..b]`, `expr[a..b]` | Collection indexing pretending to be collection slicing, using `Range`, `RangeFrom`, `RangeTo`, or `RangeFull` as the “index” |