Struct openssl::x509::SslString [] [src]

pub struct SslString {
    // some fields omitted
}

Methods from Deref<Target=str>

fn len(&self) -> usize

Returns the length of self in bytes.

Examples

assert_eq!("foo".len(), 3);
assert_eq!("ƒoo".len(), 4); // fancy f!

fn is_empty(&self) -> bool

Returns true if this slice has a length of zero bytes.

Examples

assert!("".is_empty());

fn is_char_boundary(&self, index: usize) -> bool

Unstable (str_char)

: it is unclear whether this method pulls its weight with the existence of the char_indices iterator or this method may want to be replaced with checked slicing

Checks that index-th byte lies at the start and/or end of a UTF-8 code point sequence.

The start and end of the string (when index == self.len()) are considered to be boundaries.

Returns false if index is greater than self.len().

Examples

#![feature(str_char)]

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
assert!(s.is_char_boundary(0));
// start of `老`
assert!(s.is_char_boundary(6));
assert!(s.is_char_boundary(s.len()));

// second byte of `ö`
assert!(!s.is_char_boundary(2));

// third byte of `老`
assert!(!s.is_char_boundary(8));

fn as_bytes(&self) -> &[u8]

Converts self to a byte slice.

Examples

assert_eq!("bors".as_bytes(), b"bors");

fn as_ptr(&self) -> *const u8

Returns a raw pointer to the &str's buffer.

The caller must ensure that the string outlives this pointer, and that it is not reallocated (e.g. by pushing to the string).

Examples

let s = "Hello";
let p = s.as_ptr();

unsafe fn slice_unchecked(&self, begin: usize, end: usize) -> &str

Takes a bytewise slice from a string.

Returns the substring from [begin..end).

Safety

Caller must check both UTF-8 sequence boundaries and the boundaries of the entire slice as well.

Examples

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";

unsafe {
    assert_eq!(s.slice_unchecked(0, 21), "Löwe 老虎 Léopard");
}

unsafe fn slice_mut_unchecked(&mut self, begin: usize, end: usize) -> &mut str

Unstable (str_slice_mut)

: recently added

Takes a bytewise mutable slice from a string.

Same as slice_unchecked, but works with &mut str instead of &str.

fn char_range_at(&self, start: usize) -> CharRange

Unstable (str_char)

: often replaced by char_indices, this method may be removed in favor of just char_at() or eventually removed altogether

Given a byte position, return the next code point and its index.

This can be used to iterate over the Unicode code points of a string.

Panics

If i is greater than or equal to the length of the string. If i is not the index of the beginning of a valid UTF-8 sequence.

Examples

This example manually iterates through the code points of a string; this should normally be done by .chars() or .char_indices().

#![feature(str_char, core)]

use std::str::CharRange;

let s = "中华Việt Nam";
let mut i = 0;
while i < s.len() {
    let CharRange {ch, next} = s.char_range_at(i);
    println!("{}: {}", i, ch);
    i = next;
}

This outputs:

0: 中
3: 华
6: V
7: i
8: e
9:
11:
13: t
14:
15: N
16: a
17: m

fn char_range_at_reverse(&self, start: usize) -> CharRange

Unstable (str_char)

: often replaced by char_indices, this method may be removed in favor of just char_at_reverse() or eventually removed altogether

Given a byte position, return the previous char and its position.

This function can be used to iterate over a Unicode code points in reverse.

Note that Unicode has many features, such as combining marks, ligatures, and direction marks, that need to be taken into account to correctly reverse a string.

Returns 0 for next index if called on start index 0.

Panics

If i is greater than the length of the string. If i is not an index following a valid UTF-8 sequence.

Examples

This example manually iterates through the code points of a string; this should normally be done by .chars().rev() or .char_indices().

#![feature(str_char, core)]

use std::str::CharRange;

let s = "中华Việt Nam";
let mut i = s.len();
while i > 0 {
    let CharRange {ch, next} = s.char_range_at_reverse(i);
    println!("{}: {}", i, ch);
    i = next;
}

This outputs:

18: m
17: a
16: N
15:
14: t
13:
11:
9: e
8: i
7: V
6: 华
3: 中

fn char_at(&self, i: usize) -> char

Unstable (str_char)

: frequently replaced by the chars() iterator, this method may be removed or possibly renamed in the future; it is normally replaced by chars/char_indices iterators or by getting the first char from a subslice

Given a byte position, return the char at that position.

Panics

If i is greater than or equal to the length of the string. If i is not the index of the beginning of a valid UTF-8 sequence.

Examples

#![feature(str_char)]

let s = "abπc";
assert_eq!(s.char_at(1), 'b');
assert_eq!(s.char_at(2), 'π');
assert_eq!(s.char_at(4), 'c');

fn char_at_reverse(&self, i: usize) -> char

Unstable (str_char)

: see char_at for more details, but reverse semantics are also somewhat unclear, especially with which cases generate panics

Given a byte position, return the char at that position, counting from the end.

Panics

If i is greater than the length of the string. If i is not an index following a valid UTF-8 sequence.

Examples

#![feature(str_char)]

let s = "abπc";
assert_eq!(s.char_at_reverse(1), 'a');
assert_eq!(s.char_at_reverse(2), 'b');
assert_eq!(s.char_at_reverse(3), 'π');

fn slice_shift_char(&self) -> Option<(char, &str)>

Unstable (str_char)

: awaiting conventions about shifting and slices and may not be warranted with the existence of the chars and/or char_indices iterators

Retrieves the first code point from a &str and returns it.

Note that a single Unicode character (grapheme cluster) can be composed of multiple chars.

This does not allocate a new string; instead, it returns a slice that points one code point beyond the code point that was shifted.

None is returned if the slice is empty.

Examples

#![feature(str_char)]

let s = "Łódź"; // \u{141}o\u{301}dz\u{301}
let (c, s1) = s.slice_shift_char().unwrap();

assert_eq!(c, 'Ł');
assert_eq!(s1, "ódź");

let (c, s2) = s1.slice_shift_char().unwrap();

assert_eq!(c, 'o');
assert_eq!(s2, "\u{301}dz\u{301}");

fn split_at(&self, mid: usize) -> (&str, &str)

Divide one string slice into two at an index.

The index mid is a byte offset from the start of the string that must be on a char boundary.

Return slices &self[..mid] and &self[mid..].

Panics

Panics if mid is beyond the last code point of the string, or if it is not on a char boundary.

Examples

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
let first_space = s.find(' ').unwrap_or(s.len());
let (a, b) = s.split_at(first_space);

assert_eq!(a, "Löwe");
assert_eq!(b, " 老虎 Léopard");

fn split_at_mut(&mut self, mid: usize) -> (&mut str, &mut str)

Divide one mutable string slice into two at an index.

fn chars(&self) -> Chars

An iterator over the code points of self.

In Unicode relationship between code points and characters is complex. A single character may be composed of multiple code points (e.g. diacritical marks added to a letter), and a single code point (e.g. Hangul syllable) may contain multiple characters.

For iteration over human-readable characters a grapheme cluster iterator may be more appropriate. See the unicode-segmentation crate.

Examples

let v: Vec<char> = "ASCII żółć 🇨🇭 한".chars().collect();

assert_eq!(v, ['A', 'S', 'C', 'I', 'I', ' ',
    'z', '\u{307}', 'o', '\u{301}', 'ł', 'c', '\u{301}', ' ',
    '\u{1f1e8}', '\u{1f1ed}', ' ', '한']);

fn char_indices(&self) -> CharIndices

An iterator over the chars of self and their byte offsets.

Examples

let v: Vec<(usize, char)> = "A🇨🇭".char_indices().collect();
let b = vec![(0, 'A'), (1, '\u{1f1e8}'), (5, '\u{1f1ed}')];

assert_eq!(v, b);

fn bytes(&self) -> Bytes

An iterator over the bytes of self.

Examples

let v: Vec<u8> = "bors".bytes().collect();

assert_eq!(v, b"bors".to_vec());

fn split_whitespace(&self) -> SplitWhitespace

An iterator over the non-empty substrings of self which contain no whitespace, and which are separated by any amount of whitespace.

Examples

let some_words = " Mary   had\ta\u{2009}little  \n\t lamb";
let v: Vec<&str> = some_words.split_whitespace().collect();

assert_eq!(v, ["Mary", "had", "a", "little", "lamb"]);

fn lines(&self) -> Lines

An iterator over the lines of a string, separated by \n or \r\n.

This does not include the empty string after a trailing newline or CRLF.

Examples

let four_lines = "foo\nbar\n\r\nbaz";
let v: Vec<&str> = four_lines.lines().collect();

assert_eq!(v, ["foo", "bar", "", "baz"]);

Leaving off the trailing character:

let four_lines = "foo\r\nbar\n\nbaz\n";
let v: Vec<&str> = four_lines.lines().collect();

assert_eq!(v, ["foo", "bar", "", "baz"]);

fn lines_any(&self) -> LinesAny

Deprecated since 1.4.0

: use lines() instead now

An iterator over the lines of a string, separated by either \n or \r\n.

As with .lines(), this does not include an empty trailing line.

Examples

let four_lines = "foo\r\nbar\n\r\nbaz";
let v: Vec<&str> = four_lines.lines_any().collect();

assert_eq!(v, ["foo", "bar", "", "baz"]);

Leaving off the trailing character:

let four_lines = "foo\r\nbar\n\r\nbaz\n";
let v: Vec<&str> = four_lines.lines_any().collect();

assert_eq!(v, ["foo", "bar", "", "baz"]);

fn utf16_units(&self) -> Utf16Units

Unstable (str_utf16)

: this functionality may only be provided by libunicode

Returns an iterator of u16 over the string encoded as UTF-16.

fn contains<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> bool where P: Pattern<'a>

Returns true if self contains another &str.

Examples

assert!("bananas".contains("nana"));

assert!(!"bananas".contains("foobar"));

fn starts_with<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> bool where P: Pattern<'a>

Returns true if the given &str is a prefix of the string.

Examples

assert!("banana".starts_with("ba"));

fn ends_with<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> bool where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

Returns true if the given &str is a suffix of the string.

Examples

assert!("banana".ends_with("nana"));

fn find<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Option<usize> where P: Pattern<'a>

Returns the byte index of the first character of self that matches the pattern, if it exists.

Returns None if it doesn't exist.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches.

Examples

Simple patterns:

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";

assert_eq!(s.find('L'), Some(0));
assert_eq!(s.find('é'), Some(14));
assert_eq!(s.find("Léopard"), Some(13));

More complex patterns with closures:

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";

assert_eq!(s.find(char::is_whitespace), Some(5));
assert_eq!(s.find(char::is_lowercase), Some(1));

Not finding the pattern:

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];

assert_eq!(s.find(x), None);

fn rfind<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Option<usize> where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

Returns the byte index of the last character of self that matches the pattern, if it exists.

Returns None if it doesn't exist.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches.

Examples

Simple patterns:

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";

assert_eq!(s.rfind('L'), Some(13));
assert_eq!(s.rfind('é'), Some(14));

More complex patterns with closures:

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";

assert_eq!(s.rfind(char::is_whitespace), Some(12));
assert_eq!(s.rfind(char::is_lowercase), Some(20));

Not finding the pattern:

let s = "Löwe 老虎 Léopard";
let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];

assert_eq!(s.rfind(x), None);

fn split<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Split<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>

An iterator over substrings of self, separated by characters matched by a pattern.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines the split. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator will be double ended if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, eg, char but not for &str.

If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, rsplit() can be used.

Examples

Simple patterns:

let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb".split(' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["Mary", "had", "a", "little", "lamb"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "".split('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, [""]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".split('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "", "tiger", "leopard"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lion::tiger::leopard".split("::").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "tiger", "leopard"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1def2ghi".split(char::is_numeric).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "def", "ghi"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXtigerXleopard".split(char::is_uppercase).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "tiger", "leopard"]);

A more complex pattern, using a closure:

let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".split(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "def", "ghi"]);

If a string contains multiple contiguous separators, you will end up with empty strings in the output:

let x = "||||a||b|c".to_string();
let d: Vec<_> = x.split('|').collect();

assert_eq!(d, &["", "", "", "", "a", "", "b", "c"]);

This can lead to possibly surprising behavior when whitespace is used as the separator. This code is correct:

let x = "    a  b c".to_string();
let d: Vec<_> = x.split(' ').collect();

assert_eq!(d, &["", "", "", "", "a", "", "b", "c"]);

It does not give you:

assert_eq!(d, &["a", "b", "c"]);

Use .split_whitespace() for this behavior.

fn rsplit<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RSplit<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

An iterator over substrings of self, separated by characters matched by a pattern and yielded in reverse order.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines the split. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be double ended if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.

For iterating from the front, split() can be used.

Examples

Simple patterns:

let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb".rsplit(' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lamb", "little", "a", "had", "Mary"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "".rsplit('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, [""]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".rsplit('X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "tiger", "", "lion"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lion::tiger::leopard".rsplit("::").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "tiger", "lion"]);

A more complex pattern, using a closure:

let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".rsplit(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["ghi", "def", "abc"]);

fn split_terminator<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> SplitTerminator<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>

An iterator over substrings of self, separated by characters matched by a pattern.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines the split. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Equivalent to split, except that the trailing substring is skipped if empty.

This method can be used for string data that is terminated, rather than separated by a pattern.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator will be double ended if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, eg, char but not for &str.

If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, rsplit_terminator() can be used.

Examples

let v: Vec<&str> = "A.B.".split_terminator('.').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["A", "B"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "A..B..".split_terminator(".").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["A", "", "B", ""]);

fn rsplit_terminator<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RSplitTerminator<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

An iterator over substrings of self, separated by characters matched by a pattern and yielded in reverse order.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines the split. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Equivalent to split, except that the trailing substring is skipped if empty.

This method can be used for string data that is terminated, rather than separated by a pattern.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be double ended if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.

For iterating from the front, split_terminator() can be used.

Examples

let v: Vec<&str> = "A.B.".rsplit_terminator('.').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["B", "A"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "A..B..".rsplit_terminator(".").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["", "B", "", "A"]);

fn splitn<'a, P>(&'a self, count: usize, pat: P) -> SplitN<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>

An iterator over substrings of self, separated by a pattern, restricted to returning at most count items.

The last element returned, if any, will contain the remainder of the string. The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines the split. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator will not be double ended, because it is not efficient to support.

If the pattern allows a reverse search, rsplitn() can be used.

Examples

Simple patterns:

let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lambda".splitn(3, ' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["Mary", "had", "a little lambda"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".splitn(3, "X").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lion", "", "tigerXleopard"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "abcXdef".splitn(1, 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abcXdef"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "".splitn(1, 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, [""]);

A more complex pattern, using a closure:

let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".splitn(2, |c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "defXghi"]);

fn rsplitn<'a, P>(&'a self, count: usize, pat: P) -> RSplitN<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

An iterator over substrings of self, separated by a pattern, starting from the end of the string, restricted to returning at most count items.

The last element returned, if any, will contain the remainder of the string.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines the split. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator will not be double ended, because it is not efficient to support.

splitn() can be used for splitting from the front.

Examples

Simple patterns:

let v: Vec<&str> = "Mary had a little lamb".rsplitn(3, ' ').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["lamb", "little", "Mary had a"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lionXXtigerXleopard".rsplitn(3, 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "tiger", "lionX"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "lion::tiger::leopard".rsplitn(2, "::").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["leopard", "lion::tiger"]);

A more complex pattern, using a closure:

let v: Vec<&str> = "abc1defXghi".rsplitn(2, |c| c == '1' || c == 'X').collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["ghi", "abc1def"]);

fn matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> Matches<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>

An iterator over the matches of a pattern within self.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator will be double ended if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, eg, char but not for &str.

If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, rmatches() can be used.

Examples

let v: Vec<&str> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".matches("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "abc", "abc"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "1abc2abc3".matches(char::is_numeric).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["1", "2", "3"]);

fn rmatches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RMatches<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

An iterator over the matches of a pattern within self, yielded in reverse order.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be double ended if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.

For iterating from the front, matches() can be used.

Examples

let v: Vec<&str> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".rmatches("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["abc", "abc", "abc"]);

let v: Vec<&str> = "1abc2abc3".rmatches(char::is_numeric).collect();
assert_eq!(v, ["3", "2", "1"]);

fn match_indices<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> MatchIndices<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>

Unstable (str_match_indices)

: might have its iterator type changed

An iterator over the disjoint matches of a pattern within self as well as the index that the match starts at.

For matches of pat within self that overlap, only the indices corresponding to the first match are returned.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator will be double ended if the pattern allows a reverse search and forward/reverse search yields the same elements. This is true for, eg, char but not for &str.

If the pattern allows a reverse search but its results might differ from a forward search, rmatch_indices() can be used.

Examples

#![feature(str_match_indices)]

let v: Vec<_> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".match_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(0, "abc"), (6, "abc"), (12, "abc")]);

let v: Vec<_> = "1abcabc2".match_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(1, "abc"), (4, "abc")]);

let v: Vec<_> = "ababa".match_indices("aba").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(0, "aba")]); // only the first `aba`

fn rmatch_indices<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> RMatchIndices<'a, P> where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

Unstable (str_match_indices)

: might have its iterator type changed

An iterator over the disjoint matches of a pattern within self, yielded in reverse order along with the index of the match.

For matches of pat within self that overlap, only the indices corresponding to the last match are returned.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches. Additional libraries might provide more complex patterns like regular expressions.

Iterator behavior

The returned iterator requires that the pattern supports a reverse search, and it will be double ended if a forward/reverse search yields the same elements.

For iterating from the front, match_indices() can be used.

Examples

#![feature(str_match_indices)]

let v: Vec<_> = "abcXXXabcYYYabc".rmatch_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(12, "abc"), (6, "abc"), (0, "abc")]);

let v: Vec<_> = "1abcabc2".rmatch_indices("abc").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(4, "abc"), (1, "abc")]);

let v: Vec<_> = "ababa".rmatch_indices("aba").collect();
assert_eq!(v, [(2, "aba")]); // only the last `aba`

fn trim(&self) -> &str

Returns a &str with leading and trailing whitespace removed.

Examples

let s = " Hello\tworld\t";
assert_eq!(s.trim(), "Hello\tworld");

fn trim_left(&self) -> &str

Returns a &str with leading whitespace removed.

Examples

let s = " Hello\tworld\t";
assert_eq!(s.trim_left(), "Hello\tworld\t");

fn trim_right(&self) -> &str

Returns a &str with trailing whitespace removed.

Examples

let s = " Hello\tworld\t";
assert_eq!(s.trim_right(), " Hello\tworld");

fn trim_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: DoubleEndedSearcher<'a>

Returns a string with all pre- and suffixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.

The pattern can be a simple char, or a closure that determines if a character matches.

Examples

Simple patterns:

assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_matches('1'), "foo1bar");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_matches(char::is_numeric), "foo1bar");

let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_matches(x), "foo1bar");

A more complex pattern, using a closure:

assert_eq!("1foo1barXX".trim_matches(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X'), "foo1bar");

fn trim_left_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str where P: Pattern<'a>

Returns a string with all prefixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches.

Examples

assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_left_matches('1'), "foo1bar11");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_left_matches(char::is_numeric), "foo1bar123");

let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_left_matches(x), "foo1bar12");

fn trim_right_matches<'a, P>(&'a self, pat: P) -> &'a str where P: Pattern<'a>, P::Searcher: ReverseSearcher<'a>

Returns a string with all suffixes that match a pattern repeatedly removed.

The pattern can be a simple &str, char, or a closure that determines if a character matches.

Examples

Simple patterns:

assert_eq!("11foo1bar11".trim_right_matches('1'), "11foo1bar");
assert_eq!("123foo1bar123".trim_right_matches(char::is_numeric), "123foo1bar");

let x: &[_] = &['1', '2'];
assert_eq!("12foo1bar12".trim_right_matches(x), "12foo1bar");

A more complex pattern, using a closure:

assert_eq!("1fooX".trim_left_matches(|c| c == '1' || c == 'X'), "fooX");

fn parse<F>(&self) -> Result<F, F::Err> where F: FromStr

Parses self into the specified type.

Failure

Will return Err if it's not possible to parse self into the type.

Example

assert_eq!("4".parse::<u32>(), Ok(4));

Failing:

assert!("j".parse::<u32>().is_err());

fn replace(&self, from: &str, to: &str) -> String

Replaces all occurrences of one string with another.

replace takes two arguments, a sub-&str to find in self, and a second &str to replace it with. If the original &str isn't found, no change occurs.

Examples

let s = "this is old";

assert_eq!(s.replace("old", "new"), "this is new");

When a &str isn't found:

let s = "this is old";
assert_eq!(s.replace("cookie monster", "little lamb"), s);

fn to_lowercase(&self) -> String

Returns the lowercase equivalent of this string.

Examples

let s = "HELLO";
assert_eq!(s.to_lowercase(), "hello");

fn to_uppercase(&self) -> String

Returns the uppercase equivalent of this string.

Examples

let s = "hello";
assert_eq!(s.to_uppercase(), "HELLO");

fn escape_default(&self) -> String

Unstable (str_escape)

: return type may change to be an iterator

Escapes each char in s with char::escape_default.

fn escape_unicode(&self) -> String

Unstable (str_escape)

: return type may change to be an iterator

Escapes each char in s with char::escape_unicode.

fn into_string(self: Box<str>) -> String

Converts the Box<str> into a String without copying or allocating.

Trait Implementations

impl<'s> Drop for SslString

fn drop(&mut self)

impl Deref for SslString

type Target = str

fn deref(&self) -> &str

impl Display for SslString

fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> Result

impl Debug for SslString

fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) -> Result