1.0.0[−][src]Function nom::lib::std::mem::drop
pub fn drop<T>(_x: T)
Disposes of a value.
This does call the argument's implementation of Drop.
This effectively does nothing for types which implement Copy, e.g.
integers. Such values are copied and then moved into the function, so the
value persists after this function call.
This function is not magic; it is literally defined as
pub fn drop<T>(_x: T) { }
Because _x is moved into the function, it is automatically dropped before
the function returns.
Examples
Basic usage:
let v = vec![1, 2, 3]; drop(v); // explicitly drop the vector
Since RefCell enforces the borrow rules at runtime, drop can
release a RefCell borrow:
use std::cell::RefCell; let x = RefCell::new(1); let mut mutable_borrow = x.borrow_mut(); *mutable_borrow = 1; drop(mutable_borrow); // relinquish the mutable borrow on this slot let borrow = x.borrow(); println!("{}", *borrow);
Integers and other types implementing Copy are unaffected by drop.
#[derive(Copy, Clone)] struct Foo(u8); let x = 1; let y = Foo(2); drop(x); // a copy of `x` is moved and dropped drop(y); // a copy of `y` is moved and dropped println!("x: {}, y: {}", x, y.0); // still available