Closures: Anonymous Functions that Capture Their Environment
Rust’s closures are anonymous functions you can save in a variable or pass as arguments to other functions. You can create the closure in one place and then call the closure elsewhere to evaluate it in a different context. Unlike functions, closures can capture values from the scope in which they’re defined. We’ll demonstrate how these closure features allow for code reuse and behavior customization.
Capturing the Environment with Closures
We’ll first examine how we can use closures to capture values from the environment they’re defined in for later use. Here’s the scenario: Every so often, our t-shirt company gives away an exclusive, limited-edition shirt to someone on our mailing list as a promotion. People on the mailing list can optionally add their favorite color to their profile. If the person chosen for a free shirt has their favorite color set, they get that color shirt. If the person hasn’t specified a favorite color, they get whatever color the company currently has the most of.
There are many ways to implement this. For this example, we’re going to use an
enum called ShirtColor
that has the variants Red
and Blue
(limiting the
number of colors available for simplicity). We represent the company’s
inventory with an Inventory
struct that has a field named shirts
that
contains a Vec<ShirtColor>
representing the shirt colors currently in stock.
The method giveaway
defined on Inventory
gets the optional shirt
color preference of the free shirt winner, and returns the shirt color the
person will get. This setup is shown in Listing 13-1:
Filename: src/main.rs
#[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Copy, Clone)]
enum ShirtColor {
Red,
Blue,
}
struct Inventory {
shirts: Vec<ShirtColor>,
}
impl Inventory {
fn giveaway(&self, user_preference: Option<ShirtColor>) -> ShirtColor {
user_preference.unwrap_or_else(|| self.most_stocked())
}
fn most_stocked(&self) -> ShirtColor {
let mut num_red = 0;
let mut num_blue = 0;
for color in &self.shirts {
match color {
ShirtColor::Red => num_red += 1,
ShirtColor::Blue => num_blue += 1,
}
}
if num_red > num_blue {
ShirtColor::Red
} else {
ShirtColor::Blue
}
}
}
fn main() {
let store = Inventory {
shirts: vec![ShirtColor::Blue, ShirtColor::Red, ShirtColor::Blue],
};
let user_pref1 = Some(ShirtColor::Red);
let giveaway1 = store.giveaway(user_pref1);
println!(
"The user with preference {:?} gets {:?}",
user_pref1, giveaway1
);
let user_pref2 = None;
let giveaway2 = store.giveaway(user_pref2);
println!(
"The user with preference {:?} gets {:?}",
user_pref2, giveaway2
);
}
The store
defined in main
has two blue shirts and one red shirt remaining
to distribute for this limited-edition promotion. We call the giveaway
method
for a user with a preference for a red shirt and a user without any preference.
Again, this code could be implemented in many ways, and here, to focus on
closures, we’ve stuck to concepts you’ve already learned except for the body of
the giveaway
method that uses a closure. In the giveaway
method, we get the
user preference as a parameter of type Option<ShirtColor>
and call the
unwrap_or_else
method on user_preference
. The unwrap_or_else
method on
Option<T>
is defined by the standard library.
It takes one argument: a closure without any arguments that returns a value T
(the same type stored in the Some
variant of the Option<T>
, in this case
ShirtColor
). If the Option<T>
is the Some
variant, unwrap_or_else
returns the value from within the Some
. If the Option<T>
is the None
variant, unwrap_or_else
calls the closure and returns the value returned by
the closure.
We specify the closure expression || self.most_stocked()
as the argument to
unwrap_or_else
. This is a closure that takes no parameters itself (if the
closure had parameters, they would appear between the two vertical bars). The
body of the closure calls self.most_stocked()
. We’re defining the closure
here, and the implementation of unwrap_or_else
will evaluate the closure
later if the result is needed.
Running this code prints:
$ cargo run
Compiling shirt-company v0.1.0 (file:///projects/shirt-company)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.27s
Running `target/debug/shirt-company`
The user with preference Some(Red) gets Red
The user with preference None gets Blue
One interesting aspect here is that we’ve passed a closure that calls
self.most_stocked()
on the current Inventory
instance. The standard library
didn’t need to know anything about the Inventory
or ShirtColor
types we
defined, or the logic we want to use in this scenario. The closure captures an
immutable reference to the self
Inventory
instance and passes it with the
code we specify to the unwrap_or_else
method. Functions, on the other hand,
are not able to capture their environment in this way.
Closure Type Inference and Annotation
There are more differences between functions and closures. Closures don’t
usually require you to annotate the types of the parameters or the return value
like fn
functions do. Type annotations are required on functions because the
types are part of an explicit interface exposed to your users. Defining this
interface rigidly is important for ensuring that everyone agrees on what types
of values a function uses and returns. Closures, on the other hand, aren’t used
in an exposed interface like this: they’re stored in variables and used without
naming them and exposing them to users of our library.
Closures are typically short and relevant only within a narrow context rather than in any arbitrary scenario. Within these limited contexts, the compiler can infer the types of the parameters and the return type, similar to how it’s able to infer the types of most variables (there are rare cases where the compiler needs closure type annotations too).
As with variables, we can add type annotations if we want to increase explicitness and clarity at the cost of being more verbose than is strictly necessary. Annotating the types for a closure would look like the definition shown in Listing 13-2. In this example, we’re defining a closure and storing it in a variable rather than defining the closure in the spot we pass it as an argument as we did in Listing 13-1.
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::thread; use std::time::Duration; fn generate_workout(intensity: u32, random_number: u32) { let expensive_closure = |num: u32| -> u32 { println!("calculating slowly..."); thread::sleep(Duration::from_secs(2)); num }; if intensity < 25 { println!("Today, do {} pushups!", expensive_closure(intensity)); println!("Next, do {} situps!", expensive_closure(intensity)); } else { if random_number == 3 { println!("Take a break today! Remember to stay hydrated!"); } else { println!( "Today, run for {} minutes!", expensive_closure(intensity) ); } } } fn main() { let simulated_user_specified_value = 10; let simulated_random_number = 7; generate_workout(simulated_user_specified_value, simulated_random_number); }
With type annotations added, the syntax of closures looks more similar to the syntax of functions. Here we define a function that adds 1 to its parameter and a closure that has the same behavior, for comparison. We’ve added some spaces to line up the relevant parts. This illustrates how closure syntax is similar to function syntax except for the use of pipes and the amount of syntax that is optional:
fn add_one_v1 (x: u32) -> u32 { x + 1 }
let add_one_v2 = |x: u32| -> u32 { x + 1 };
let add_one_v3 = |x| { x + 1 };
let add_one_v4 = |x| x + 1 ;
The first line shows a function definition, and the second line shows a fully
annotated closure definition. In the third line, we remove the type annotations
from the closure definition. In the fourth line, we remove the brackets, which
are optional because the closure body has only one expression. These are all
valid definitions that will produce the same behavior when they’re called. The
add_one_v3
and add_one_v4
lines require the closures to be evaluated to be
able to compile because the types will be inferred from their usage. This is
similar to let v = Vec::new();
needing either type annotations or values of
some type to be inserted into the Vec
for Rust to be able to infer the type.
For closure definitions, the compiler will infer one concrete type for each of
their parameters and for their return value. For instance, Listing 13-3 shows
the definition of a short closure that just returns the value it receives as a
parameter. This closure isn’t very useful except for the purposes of this
example. Note that we haven’t added any type annotations to the definition.
Because there are no type annotations, we can call the closure with any type,
which we’ve done here with String
the first time. If we then try to call
example_closure
with an integer, we’ll get an error.
Filename: src/main.rs
fn main() {
let example_closure = |x| x;
let s = example_closure(String::from("hello"));
let n = example_closure(5);
}
The compiler gives us this error:
$ cargo run
Compiling closure-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/closure-example)
error[E0308]: mismatched types
--> src/main.rs:5:29
|
5 | let n = example_closure(5);
| --------------- ^- help: try using a conversion method: `.to_string()`
| | |
| | expected `String`, found integer
| arguments to this function are incorrect
|
note: expected because the closure was earlier called with an argument of type `String`
--> src/main.rs:4:29
|
4 | let s = example_closure(String::from("hello"));
| --------------- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ expected because this argument is of type `String`
| |
| in this closure call
note: closure parameter defined here
--> src/main.rs:2:28
|
2 | let example_closure = |x| x;
| ^
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0308`.
error: could not compile `closure-example` (bin "closure-example") due to 1 previous error
The first time we call example_closure
with the String
value, the compiler
infers the type of x
and the return type of the closure to be String
. Those
types are then locked into the closure in example_closure
, and we get a type
error when we next try to use a different type with the same closure.
Capturing References or Moving Ownership
Closures can capture values from their environment in three ways, which directly map to the three ways a function can take a parameter: borrowing immutably, borrowing mutably, and taking ownership. The closure will decide which of these to use based on what the body of the function does with the captured values.
In Listing 13-4, we define a closure that captures an immutable reference to
the vector named list
because it only needs an immutable reference to print
the value:
Filename: src/main.rs
fn main() { let list = vec![1, 2, 3]; println!("Before defining closure: {:?}", list); let only_borrows = || println!("From closure: {:?}", list); println!("Before calling closure: {:?}", list); only_borrows(); println!("After calling closure: {:?}", list); }
This example also illustrates that a variable can bind to a closure definition, and we can later call the closure by using the variable name and parentheses as if the variable name were a function name.
Because we can have multiple immutable references to list
at the same time,
list
is still accessible from the code before the closure definition, after
the closure definition but before the closure is called, and after the closure
is called. This code compiles, runs, and prints:
$ cargo run
Compiling closure-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/closure-example)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.43s
Running `target/debug/closure-example`
Before defining closure: [1, 2, 3]
Before calling closure: [1, 2, 3]
From closure: [1, 2, 3]
After calling closure: [1, 2, 3]
Next, in Listing 13-5, we change the closure body so that it adds an element to
the list
vector. The closure now captures a mutable reference:
Filename: src/main.rs
fn main() { let mut list = vec![1, 2, 3]; println!("Before defining closure: {:?}", list); let mut borrows_mutably = || list.push(7); borrows_mutably(); println!("After calling closure: {:?}", list); }
This code compiles, runs, and prints:
$ cargo run
Compiling closure-example v0.1.0 (file:///projects/closure-example)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.43s
Running `target/debug/closure-example`
Before defining closure: [1, 2, 3]
After calling closure: [1, 2, 3, 7]
Note that there’s no longer a println!
between the definition and the call of
the borrows_mutably
closure: when borrows_mutably
is defined, it captures a
mutable reference to list
. We don’t use the closure again after the closure
is called, so the mutable borrow ends. Between the closure definition and the
closure call, an immutable borrow to print isn’t allowed because no other
borrows are allowed when there’s a mutable borrow. Try adding a println!
there to see what error message you get!
If you want to force the closure to take ownership of the values it uses in the
environment even though the body of the closure doesn’t strictly need
ownership, you can use the move
keyword before the parameter list.
This technique is mostly useful when passing a closure to a new thread to move
the data so that it’s owned by the new thread. We’ll discuss threads and why
you would want to use them in detail in Chapter 16 when we talk about
concurrency, but for now, let’s briefly explore spawning a new thread using a
closure that needs the move
keyword. Listing 13-6 shows Listing 13-4 modified
to print the vector in a new thread rather than in the main thread:
Filename: src/main.rs
use std::thread; fn main() { let list = vec![1, 2, 3]; println!("Before defining closure: {:?}", list); thread::spawn(move || println!("From thread: {:?}", list)) .join() .unwrap(); }
We spawn a new thread, giving the thread a closure to run as an argument. The
closure body prints out the list. In Listing 13-4, the closure only captured
list
using an immutable reference because that's the least amount of access
to list
needed to print it. In this example, even though the closure body
still only needs an immutable reference, we need to specify that list
should
be moved into the closure by putting the move
keyword at the beginning of the
closure definition. The new thread might finish before the rest of the main
thread finishes, or the main thread might finish first. If the main thread
maintained ownership of list
but ended before the new thread did and dropped
list
, the immutable reference in the thread would be invalid. Therefore, the
compiler requires that list
be moved into the closure given to the new thread
so the reference will be valid. Try removing the move
keyword or using list
in the main thread after the closure is defined to see what compiler errors you
get!
Moving Captured Values Out of Closures and the Fn
Traits
Once a closure has captured a reference or captured ownership of a value from the environment where the closure is defined (thus affecting what, if anything, is moved into the closure), the code in the body of the closure defines what happens to the references or values when the closure is evaluated later (thus affecting what, if anything, is moved out of the closure). A closure body can do any of the following: move a captured value out of the closure, mutate the captured value, neither move nor mutate the value, or capture nothing from the environment to begin with.
The way a closure captures and handles values from the environment affects
which traits the closure implements, and traits are how functions and structs
can specify what kinds of closures they can use. Closures will automatically
implement one, two, or all three of these Fn
traits, in an additive fashion,
depending on how the closure’s body handles the values:
FnOnce
applies to closures that can be called once. All closures implement at least this trait, because all closures can be called. A closure that moves captured values out of its body will only implementFnOnce
and none of the otherFn
traits, because it can only be called once.FnMut
applies to closures that don’t move captured values out of their body, but that might mutate the captured values. These closures can be called more than once.Fn
applies to closures that don’t move captured values out of their body and that don’t mutate captured values, as well as closures that capture nothing from their environment. These closures can be called more than once without mutating their environment, which is important in cases such as calling a closure multiple times concurrently.
Let’s look at the definition of the unwrap_or_else
method on Option<T>
that
we used in Listing 13-1:
impl<T> Option<T> {
pub fn unwrap_or_else<F>(self, f: F) -> T
where
F: FnOnce() -> T
{
match self {
Some(x) => x,
None => f(),
}
}
}
Recall that T
is the generic type representing the type of the value in the
Some
variant of an Option
. That type T
is also the return type of the
unwrap_or_else
function: code that calls unwrap_or_else
on an
Option<String>
, for example, will get a String
.
Next, notice that the unwrap_or_else
function has the additional generic type
parameter F
. The F
type is the type of the parameter named f
, which is
the closure we provide when calling unwrap_or_else
.
The trait bound specified on the generic type F
is FnOnce() -> T
, which
means F
must be able to be called once, take no arguments, and return a T
.
Using FnOnce
in the trait bound expresses the constraint that
unwrap_or_else
is only going to call f
at most one time. In the body of
unwrap_or_else
, we can see that if the Option
is Some
, f
won’t be
called. If the Option
is None
, f
will be called once. Because all
closures implement FnOnce
, unwrap_or_else
accepts the most different kinds
of closures and is as flexible as it can be.
Note: Functions can implement all three of the
Fn
traits too. If what we want to do doesn’t require capturing a value from the environment, we can use the name of a function rather than a closure where we need something that implements one of theFn
traits. For example, on anOption<Vec<T>>
value, we could callunwrap_or_else(Vec::new)
to get a new, empty vector if the value isNone
.
Now let’s look at the standard library method sort_by_key
defined on slices,
to see how that differs from unwrap_or_else
and why sort_by_key
uses
FnMut
instead of FnOnce
for the trait bound. The closure gets one argument
in the form of a reference to the current item in the slice being considered,
and returns a value of type K
that can be ordered. This function is useful
when you want to sort a slice by a particular attribute of each item. In
Listing 13-7, we have a list of Rectangle
instances and we use sort_by_key
to order them by their width
attribute from low to high:
Filename: src/main.rs
#[derive(Debug)] struct Rectangle { width: u32, height: u32, } fn main() { let mut list = [ Rectangle { width: 10, height: 1 }, Rectangle { width: 3, height: 5 }, Rectangle { width: 7, height: 12 }, ]; list.sort_by_key(|r| r.width); println!("{:#?}", list); }
This code prints:
$ cargo run
Compiling rectangles v0.1.0 (file:///projects/rectangles)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.41s
Running `target/debug/rectangles`
[
Rectangle {
width: 3,
height: 5,
},
Rectangle {
width: 7,
height: 12,
},
Rectangle {
width: 10,
height: 1,
},
]
The reason sort_by_key
is defined to take an FnMut
closure is that it calls
the closure multiple times: once for each item in the slice. The closure |r| r.width
doesn’t capture, mutate, or move out anything from its environment, so
it meets the trait bound requirements.
In contrast, Listing 13-8 shows an example of a closure that implements just
the FnOnce
trait, because it moves a value out of the environment. The
compiler won’t let us use this closure with sort_by_key
:
Filename: src/main.rs
#[derive(Debug)]
struct Rectangle {
width: u32,
height: u32,
}
fn main() {
let mut list = [
Rectangle { width: 10, height: 1 },
Rectangle { width: 3, height: 5 },
Rectangle { width: 7, height: 12 },
];
let mut sort_operations = vec![];
let value = String::from("closure called");
list.sort_by_key(|r| {
sort_operations.push(value);
r.width
});
println!("{:#?}", list);
}
This is a contrived, convoluted way (that doesn’t work) to try and count the
number of times sort_by_key
calls the closure when sorting list
. This code
attempts to do this counting by pushing value
—a String
from the closure’s
environment—into the sort_operations
vector. The closure captures value
then moves value
out of the closure by transferring ownership of value
to
the sort_operations
vector. This closure can be called once; trying to call
it a second time wouldn’t work because value
would no longer be in the
environment to be pushed into sort_operations
again! Therefore, this closure
only implements FnOnce
. When we try to compile this code, we get this error
that value
can’t be moved out of the closure because the closure must
implement FnMut
:
$ cargo run
Compiling rectangles v0.1.0 (file:///projects/rectangles)
error[E0507]: cannot move out of `value`, a captured variable in an `FnMut` closure
--> src/main.rs:18:30
|
15 | let value = String::from("closure called");
| ----- captured outer variable
16 |
17 | list.sort_by_key(|r| {
| --- captured by this `FnMut` closure
18 | sort_operations.push(value);
| ^^^^^ move occurs because `value` has type `String`, which does not implement the `Copy` trait
For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0507`.
error: could not compile `rectangles` (bin "rectangles") due to 1 previous error
The error points to the line in the closure body that moves value
out of the
environment. To fix this, we need to change the closure body so that it doesn’t
move values out of the environment. To count the number of times the closure
is called, keeping a counter in the environment and incrementing its value in
the closure body is a more straightforward way to calculate that. The closure
in Listing 13-9 works with sort_by_key
because it is only capturing a mutable
reference to the num_sort_operations
counter and can therefore be called more
than once:
Filename: src/main.rs
#[derive(Debug)] struct Rectangle { width: u32, height: u32, } fn main() { let mut list = [ Rectangle { width: 10, height: 1 }, Rectangle { width: 3, height: 5 }, Rectangle { width: 7, height: 12 }, ]; let mut num_sort_operations = 0; list.sort_by_key(|r| { num_sort_operations += 1; r.width }); println!("{:#?}, sorted in {num_sort_operations} operations", list); }
The Fn
traits are important when defining or using functions or types that
make use of closures. In the next section, we’ll discuss iterators. Many
iterator methods take closure arguments, so keep these closure details in mind
as we continue!