Partial moves
Within the destructuring of a single variable, both by-move
and
by-reference
pattern bindings can be used at the same time. Doing
this will result in a partial move of the variable, which means
that parts of the variable will be moved while other parts stay. In
such a case, the parent variable cannot be used afterwards as a
whole, however the parts that are only referenced (and not moved)
can still be used.
fn main() { #[derive(Debug)] struct Person { name: String, age: Box<u8>, } let person = Person { name: String::from("Alice"), age: Box::new(20), }; // `name` is moved out of person, but `age` is referenced let Person { name, ref age } = person; println!("The person's age is {}", age); println!("The person's name is {}", name); // Error! borrow of partially moved value: `person` partial move occurs //println!("The person struct is {:?}", person); // `person` cannot be used but `person.age` can be used as it is not moved println!("The person's age from person struct is {}", person.age); }
(In this example, we store the age
variable on the heap to
illustrate the partial move: deleting ref
in the above code would
give an error as the ownership of person.age
would be moved to the
variable age
. If Person.age
were stored on the stack, ref
would
not be required as the definition of age
would copy the data from
person.age
without moving it.)