From 050a23ce6763fedf0906cd1c04b76888aae12f7d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: mo8it Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2024 15:36:14 +0200 Subject: errors2 solution --- solutions/13_error_handling/errors2.rs | 58 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++- 1 file changed, 57 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) (limited to 'solutions') diff --git a/solutions/13_error_handling/errors2.rs b/solutions/13_error_handling/errors2.rs index 4e18198..de7c32b 100644 --- a/solutions/13_error_handling/errors2.rs +++ b/solutions/13_error_handling/errors2.rs @@ -1 +1,57 @@ -// Solutions will be available before the stable release. Thank you for testing the beta version 🥰 +// Say we're writing a game where you can buy items with tokens. All items cost +// 5 tokens, and whenever you purchase items there is a processing fee of 1 +// token. A player of the game will type in how many items they want to buy, and +// the `total_cost` function will calculate the total cost of the items. Since +// the player typed in the quantity, we get it as a string. They might have +// typed anything, not just numbers! +// +// Right now, this function isn't handling the error case at all (and isn't +// handling the success case properly either). What we want to do is: If we call +// the `total_cost` function on a string that is not a number, that function +// will return a `ParseIntError`. In that case, we want to immediately return +// that error from our function and not try to multiply and add. +// +// There are at least two ways to implement this that are both correct. But one +// is a lot shorter! + +use std::num::ParseIntError; + +fn total_cost(item_quantity: &str) -> Result { + let processing_fee = 1; + let cost_per_item = 5; + + // Added `?` to propagate the error. + let qty = item_quantity.parse::()?; + // ^ added + + // Equivalent to this verbose version: + let qty = match item_quantity.parse::() { + Ok(v) => v, + Err(e) => return Err(e), + }; + + Ok(qty * cost_per_item + processing_fee) +} + +fn main() { + // You can optionally experiment here. +} + +#[cfg(test)] +mod tests { + use super::*; + use std::num::IntErrorKind; + + #[test] + fn item_quantity_is_a_valid_number() { + assert_eq!(total_cost("34"), Ok(171)); + } + + #[test] + fn item_quantity_is_an_invalid_number() { + assert_eq!( + total_cost("beep boop").unwrap_err().kind(), + &IntErrorKind::InvalidDigit, + ); + } +} -- cgit v1.2.3