A variable is a component of a stack frame, either a named function parameter, an anonymous temporary, or a named local variable.
A local variable (or stack-local allocation) holds a value directly, allocated within the stack's memory. The value is a part of the stack frame.
Local variables are immutable unless declared otherwise. For example: let mut x = ...
.
Function parameters are immutable unless declared with mut
. The mut
keyword applies only to the following parameter. For example: |mut x, y|
and fn f(mut x: Box<i32>, y: Box<i32>)
declare one mutable variable x
and one immutable variable y
.
Methods that take either self
or Box<Self>
can optionally place them in a mutable variable by prefixing them with mut
(similar to regular arguments). For example:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { trait Changer: Sized { fn change(mut self) {} fn modify(mut self: Box<Self>) {} } #}
Local variables are not initialized when allocated. Instead, the entire frame worth of local variables are allocated, on frame-entry, in an uninitialized state. Subsequent statements within a function may or may not initialize the local variables. Local variables can be used only after they have been initialized; this is enforced by the compiler.
© 2010 The Rust Project Developers
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license, at your option.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/variables.html