// ./src/error/multiple_error_types/wrap_error.md use std::error; use std::error::Error; use std::num::ParseIntError; use std::fmt; type Result = std::result::Result; #[derive(Debug)] enum DoubleError { EmptyVec, // We will defer to the parse error implementation for their error. // Supplying extra info requires adding more data to the type. Parse(ParseIntError), } impl fmt::Display for DoubleError { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { match *self { DoubleError::EmptyVec => write!(f, "please use a vector with at least one element"), // The wrapped error contains additional information and is available // via the source() method. DoubleError::Parse(..) => write!(f, "the provided string could not be parsed as int"), } } } impl error::Error for DoubleError { fn source(&self) -> Option<&(dyn error::Error + 'static)> { match *self { DoubleError::EmptyVec => None, // The cause is the underlying implementation error type. Is implicitly // cast to the trait object `&error::Error`. This works because the // underlying type already implements the `Error` trait. DoubleError::Parse(ref e) => Some(e), } } } // Implement the conversion from `ParseIntError` to `DoubleError`. // This will be automatically called by `?` if a `ParseIntError` // needs to be converted into a `DoubleError`. impl From for DoubleError { fn from(err: ParseIntError) -> DoubleError { DoubleError::Parse(err) } } fn double_first(vec: Vec<&str>) -> Result { let first = vec.first().ok_or(DoubleError::EmptyVec)?; // Here we implicitly use the `ParseIntError` implementation of `From` (which // we defined above) in order to create a `DoubleError`. let parsed = first.parse::()?; Ok(2 * parsed) } fn print(result: Result) { match result { Ok(n) => println!("The first doubled is {}", n), Err(e) => { println!("Error: {}", e); if let Some(source) = e.source() { println!(" Caused by: {}", source); } }, } } fn part0() { let numbers = vec!["42", "93", "18"]; let empty = vec![]; let strings = vec!["tofu", "93", "18"]; print(double_first(numbers)); print(double_first(empty)); print(double_first(strings)); } pub fn main() { part0(); }