pub trait RangeBounds<T>where
T: ?Sized,{
// Required methods
fn start_bound(&self) -> Bound<&T>;
fn end_bound(&self) -> Bound<&T>;
// Provided method
fn contains<U>(&self, item: &U) -> bool
where T: PartialOrd<U>,
U: PartialOrd<T> + ?Sized { ... }
}
Available on crate feature
mtls
only.Expand description
RangeBounds
is implemented by Rust’s built-in range types, produced
by range syntax like ..
, a..
, ..b
, ..=c
, d..e
, or f..=g
.
Required Methods§
1.28.0 · Sourcefn start_bound(&self) -> Bound<&T>
fn start_bound(&self) -> Bound<&T>
Start index bound.
Returns the start value as a Bound
.
§Examples
use std::ops::Bound::*;
use std::ops::RangeBounds;
assert_eq!((..10).start_bound(), Unbounded);
assert_eq!((3..10).start_bound(), Included(&3));
Provided Methods§
1.35.0 · Sourcefn contains<U>(&self, item: &U) -> bool
fn contains<U>(&self, item: &U) -> bool
Returns true
if item
is contained in the range.
§Examples
assert!( (3..5).contains(&4));
assert!(!(3..5).contains(&2));
assert!( (0.0..1.0).contains(&0.5));
assert!(!(0.0..1.0).contains(&f32::NAN));
assert!(!(0.0..f32::NAN).contains(&0.5));
assert!(!(f32::NAN..1.0).contains(&0.5));
Dyn Compatibility§
This trait is not dyn compatible.
In older versions of Rust, dyn compatibility was called "object safety", so this trait is not object safe.