Bringing Paths into Scope with the use
Keyword
It might seem like the paths we’ve written to call functions so far are
inconveniently long and repetitive. For example, in Listing 7-7, whether we
chose the absolute or relative path to the add_to_waitlist
function, every
time we wanted to call add_to_waitlist
we had to specify front_of_house
and
hosting
too. Fortunately, there’s a way to simplify this process. We can
bring a path into a scope once and then call the items in that path as if
they’re local items with the use
keyword.
In Listing 7-11, we bring the crate::front_of_house::hosting
module into the
scope of the eat_at_restaurant
function so we only have to specify
hosting::add_to_waitlist
to call the add_to_waitlist
function in
eat_at_restaurant
.
Filename: src/lib.rs
mod front_of_house {
pub mod hosting {
pub fn add_to_waitlist() {}
}
}
use crate::front_of_house::hosting;
pub fn eat_at_restaurant() {
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
}
Adding use
and a path in a scope is similar to creating a symbolic link in
the filesystem. By adding use crate::front_of_house::hosting
in the crate
root, hosting
is now a valid name in that scope, just as though the hosting
module had been defined in the crate root. Paths brought into scope with use
also check privacy, like any other paths.
You can also bring an item into scope with use
and a relative path. Listing
7-12 shows how to specify a relative path to get the same behavior as in
Listing 7-11.
Filename: src/lib.rs
mod front_of_house {
pub mod hosting {
pub fn add_to_waitlist() {}
}
}
use self::front_of_house::hosting;
pub fn eat_at_restaurant() {
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
}
Creating Idiomatic use
Paths
In Listing 7-11, you might have wondered why we specified use crate::front_of_house::hosting
and then called hosting::add_to_waitlist
in
eat_at_restaurant
rather than specifying the use
path all the way out to
the add_to_waitlist
function to achieve the same result, as in Listing 7-13.
Filename: src/lib.rs
mod front_of_house {
pub mod hosting {
pub fn add_to_waitlist() {}
}
}
use crate::front_of_house::hosting::add_to_waitlist;
pub fn eat_at_restaurant() {
add_to_waitlist();
add_to_waitlist();
add_to_waitlist();
}
Although both Listing 7-11 and 7-13 accomplish the same task, Listing 7-11 is
the idiomatic way to bring a function into scope with use
. Bringing the
function’s parent module into scope with use
means we have to specify the
parent module when calling the function. Specifying the parent module when
calling the function makes it clear that the function isn’t locally defined
while still minimizing repetition of the full path. The code in Listing 7-13 is
unclear as to where add_to_waitlist
is defined.
On the other hand, when bringing in structs, enums, and other items with use
,
it’s idiomatic to specify the full path. Listing 7-14 shows the idiomatic way
to bring the standard library’s HashMap
struct into the scope of a binary
crate.
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::collections::HashMap; fn main() { let mut map = HashMap::new(); map.insert(1, 2); }
There’s no strong reason behind this idiom: it’s just the convention that has emerged, and folks have gotten used to reading and writing Rust code this way.
The exception to this idiom is if we’re bringing two items with the same name
into scope with use
statements, because Rust doesn’t allow that. Listing 7-15
shows how to bring two Result
types into scope that have the same name but
different parent modules and how to refer to them.
Filename: src/lib.rs
use std::fmt;
use std::io;
fn function1() -> fmt::Result {
// --snip--
Ok(())
}
fn function2() -> io::Result<()> {
// --snip--
Ok(())
}
As you can see, using the parent modules distinguishes the two Result
types.
If instead we specified use std::fmt::Result
and use std::io::Result
, we’d
have two Result
types in the same scope and Rust wouldn’t know which one we
meant when we used Result
.
Providing New Names with the as
Keyword
There’s another solution to the problem of bringing two types of the same name
into the same scope with use
: after the path, we can specify as
and a new
local name, or alias, for the type. Listing 7-16 shows another way to write the
code in Listing 7-15 by renaming one of the two Result
types using as
.
Filename: src/lib.rs
use std::fmt::Result;
use std::io::Result as IoResult;
fn function1() -> Result {
// --snip--
Ok(())
}
fn function2() -> IoResult<()> {
// --snip--
Ok(())
}
In the second use
statement, we chose the new name IoResult
for the
std::io::Result
type, which won’t conflict with the Result
from std::fmt
that we’ve also brought into scope. Listing 7-15 and Listing 7-16 are
considered idiomatic, so the choice is up to you!
Re-exporting Names with pub use
When we bring a name into scope with the use
keyword, the name available in
the new scope is private. To enable the code that calls our code to refer to
that name as if it had been defined in that code’s scope, we can combine pub
and use
. This technique is called re-exporting because we’re bringing
an item into scope but also making that item available for others to bring into
their scope.
Listing 7-17 shows the code in Listing 7-11 with use
in the root module
changed to pub use
.
Filename: src/lib.rs
mod front_of_house {
pub mod hosting {
pub fn add_to_waitlist() {}
}
}
pub use crate::front_of_house::hosting;
pub fn eat_at_restaurant() {
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
hosting::add_to_waitlist();
}
By using pub use
, external code can now call the add_to_waitlist
function
using hosting::add_to_waitlist
. If we hadn’t specified pub use
, the
eat_at_restaurant
function could call hosting::add_to_waitlist
in its
scope, but external code couldn’t take advantage of this new path.
Re-exporting is useful when the internal structure of your code is different
from how programmers calling your code would think about the domain. For
example, in this restaurant metaphor, the people running the restaurant think
about “front of house” and “back of house.” But customers visiting a restaurant
probably won’t think about the parts of the restaurant in those terms. With
pub use
, we can write our code with one structure but expose a different
structure. Doing so makes our library well organized for programmers working on
the library and programmers calling the library.
Using External Packages
In Chapter 2, we programmed a guessing game project that used an external
package called rand
to get random numbers. To use rand
in our project, we
added this line to Cargo.toml:
Filename: Cargo.toml
rand = "0.8.3"
Adding rand
as a dependency in Cargo.toml tells Cargo to download the
rand
package and any dependencies from crates.io and
make rand
available to our project.
Then, to bring rand
definitions into the scope of our package, we added a
use
line starting with the name of the crate, rand
, and listed the items
we wanted to bring into scope. Recall that in the “Generating a Random
Number” section in Chapter 2, we brought the Rng
trait
into scope and called the rand::thread_rng
function:
use std::io;
use rand::Rng;
fn main() {
println!("Guess the number!");
let secret_number = rand::thread_rng().gen_range(1..101);
println!("The secret number is: {}", secret_number);
println!("Please input your guess.");
let mut guess = String::new();
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut guess)
.expect("Failed to read line");
println!("You guessed: {}", guess);
}
Members of the Rust community have made many packages available at
crates.io, and pulling any of them into your package
involves these same steps: listing them in your package’s Cargo.toml file and
using use
to bring items from their crates into scope.
Note that the standard library (std
) is also a crate that’s external to our
package. Because the standard library is shipped with the Rust language, we
don’t need to change Cargo.toml to include std
. But we do need to refer to
it with use
to bring items from there into our package’s scope. For example,
with HashMap
we would use this line:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { use std::collections::HashMap; }
This is an absolute path starting with std
, the name of the standard library
crate.
Using Nested Paths to Clean Up Large use
Lists
If we’re using multiple items defined in the same crate or same module,
listing each item on its own line can take up a lot of vertical space in our
files. For example, these two use
statements we had in the Guessing Game in
Listing 2-4 bring items from std
into scope:
Filename: src/main.rs
use rand::Rng;
// --snip--
use std::cmp::Ordering;
use std::io;
// --snip--
fn main() {
println!("Guess the number!");
let secret_number = rand::thread_rng().gen_range(1..101);
println!("The secret number is: {}", secret_number);
println!("Please input your guess.");
let mut guess = String::new();
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut guess)
.expect("Failed to read line");
println!("You guessed: {}", guess);
match guess.cmp(&secret_number) {
Ordering::Less => println!("Too small!"),
Ordering::Greater => println!("Too big!"),
Ordering::Equal => println!("You win!"),
}
}
Instead, we can use nested paths to bring the same items into scope in one line. We do this by specifying the common part of the path, followed by two colons, and then curly brackets around a list of the parts of the paths that differ, as shown in Listing 7-18.
Filename: src/main.rs
use rand::Rng;
// --snip--
use std::{cmp::Ordering, io};
// --snip--
fn main() {
println!("Guess the number!");
let secret_number = rand::thread_rng().gen_range(1..101);
println!("The secret number is: {}", secret_number);
println!("Please input your guess.");
let mut guess = String::new();
io::stdin()
.read_line(&mut guess)
.expect("Failed to read line");
let guess: u32 = guess.trim().parse().expect("Please type a number!");
println!("You guessed: {}", guess);
match guess.cmp(&secret_number) {
Ordering::Less => println!("Too small!"),
Ordering::Greater => println!("Too big!"),
Ordering::Equal => println!("You win!"),
}
}
In bigger programs, bringing many items into scope from the same crate or
module using nested paths can reduce the number of separate use
statements
needed by a lot!
We can use a nested path at any level in a path, which is useful when combining
two use
statements that share a subpath. For example, Listing 7-19 shows two
use
statements: one that brings std::io
into scope and one that brings
std::io::Write
into scope.
Filename: src/lib.rs
use std::io;
use std::io::Write;
The common part of these two paths is std::io
, and that’s the complete first
path. To merge these two paths into one use
statement, we can use self
in
the nested path, as shown in Listing 7-20.
Filename: src/lib.rs
use std::io::{self, Write};
This line brings std::io
and std::io::Write
into scope.
The Glob Operator
If we want to bring all public items defined in a path into scope, we can
specify that path followed by *
, the glob operator:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { use std::collections::*; }
This use
statement brings all public items defined in std::collections
into
the current scope. Be careful when using the glob operator! Glob can make it
harder to tell what names are in scope and where a name used in your program
was defined.
The glob operator is often used when testing to bring everything under test
into the tests
module; we’ll talk about that in the “How to Write
Tests” section in Chapter 11. The glob operator
is also sometimes used as part of the prelude pattern: see the standard
library documentation
for more information on that pattern.