#fallible #mapping #options #error-handling #result

fallible_map

Utilities for fallible mapping over Option and iterators using functions that can return Results

2 releases

0.1.1 Jul 10, 2024
0.1.0 Jul 8, 2024

#868 in Rust patterns

49 downloads per month

MIT license

11KB
93 lines

Fallible Map

Crates.io License: MIT Version Repository Homepage

fallible_map provides utilities for fallible mapping over Option types and iterators, allowing the use of functions that can return Results.

This library includes traits to enhance Option and Iterator types with methods to handle fallible operations gracefully.

Overview

This crate offers extensions for optional values and iterators to perform fallible mapping operations, returning results that properly reflect potential errors during computation.

These extensions can be useful in scenarios where operations may fail, and error handling is required.

Features

  • ExtractOption trait: A helper trait to extract the inner value of an optional container;
  • FallibleMapExt trait: Extends Option with methods for fallible operations, such as try_map, try_unwrap_or, and try_and_then;
  • FallibleMapIteratorExt trait: Extends iterators with a try_map method, allowing the use of functions that return Results during iteration, providing an iterator adaptor for seamless chaining and collection.

Installation

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
fallible_map = "^0.1"

Usage

Examples

Using FallibleMapExt with Option

use fallible_map::FallibleMapExt;

fn main() -> Result<(), String> {
    let some_number: Option<i32> = Some(2);

    let result: Result<Option<i32>, String> = some_number.try_map(|num| {
        if num % 2 == 0 {
            Ok(num * 2)
        } else {
            Err("Odd number".to_string())
        }
    });

    assert_eq!(result, Ok(Some(4)));

    Ok(())
}

Using FallibleMapExt with try_and_then

use fallible_map::FallibleMapExt;

fn main() -> Result<(), String> {
    let some_number: Option<i32> = Some(2);

    let result: Result<Option<i32>, String> = some_number.try_and_then(|num| {
        if num % 2 == 0 {
            Ok(Some(num * 2))
        } else {
            Err("Odd number".to_string())
        }
    });

    assert_eq!(result, Ok(Some(4)));

    let none_number: Option<i32> = None;

    let result = none_number.try_and_then(|num| {
        if num % 2 == 0 {
            Ok(Some(num * 2))
        } else {
            Err("Odd number".to_string())
        }
    });

    assert_eq!(result, Ok(None));

    Ok(())
}

Using FallibleMapIteratorExt with Iterator

use fallible_map::FallibleMapIteratorExt;

fn main() -> Result<(), String> {
    let numbers = vec![1, 2, 3, 4, 5];

    let mapped_numbers: Result<Vec<i32>, String> = numbers.into_iter().try_map(|x| {
        if x % 2 == 0 {
            Ok(x * 2)
        } else {
            Err(format!("Failed to process {}", x))
        }
    }).collect();

    match mapped_numbers {
        Ok(nums) => println!("Mapped successfully: {:?}", nums),
        Err(e) => println!("Error occurred: {}", e),
    }

    Ok(())
}

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License. See the LICENSE file for details.

Contribution

Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a pull request, open an issue, or suggest features and improvements.

No runtime deps