#[lang = "generator"] pub trait Generator { type Yield; type Return; fn resume(&mut self) -> GeneratorState<Self::Yield, Self::Return>; }
The trait implemented by builtin generator types.
Generators, also commonly referred to as coroutines, are currently an experimental language feature in Rust. Added in RFC 2033 generators are currently intended to primarily provide a building block for async/await syntax but will likely extend to also providing an ergonomic definition for iterators and other primitives.
The syntax and semantics for generators is unstable and will require a further RFC for stabilization. At this time, though, the syntax is closure-like:
#![feature(generators, generator_trait)] use std::ops::{Generator, GeneratorState}; fn main() { let mut generator = || { yield 1; return "foo" }; match generator.resume() { GeneratorState::Yielded(1) => {} _ => panic!("unexpected return from resume"), } match generator.resume() { GeneratorState::Complete("foo") => {} _ => panic!("unexpected return from resume"), } }
More documentation of generators can be found in the unstable book.
type Yield
The type of value this generator yields.
This associated type corresponds to the yield
expression and the values which are allowed to be returned each time a generator yields. For example an iterator-as-a-generator would likely have this type as T
, the type being iterated over.
type Return
The type of value this generator returns.
This corresponds to the type returned from a generator either with a return
statement or implicitly as the last expression of a generator literal. For example futures would use this as Result<T, E>
as it represents a completed future.
fn resume(&mut self) -> GeneratorState<Self::Yield, Self::Return>
Resumes the execution of this generator.
This function will resume execution of the generator or start execution if it hasn't already. This call will return back into the generator's last suspension point, resuming execution from the latest yield
. The generator will continue executing until it either yields or returns, at which point this function will return.
The GeneratorState
enum returned from this function indicates what state the generator is in upon returning. If the Yielded
variant is returned then the generator has reached a suspension point and a value has been yielded out. Generators in this state are available for resumption at a later point.
If Complete
is returned then the generator has completely finished with the value provided. It is invalid for the generator to be resumed again.
This function may panic if it is called after the Complete
variant has been returned previously. While generator literals in the language are guaranteed to panic on resuming after Complete
, this is not guaranteed for all implementations of the Generator
trait.
impl<T> Generator for Box<T> where
    T: Generator + ?Sized, type Yield = <T as Generator>::Yield; type Return = <T as Generator>::Return;
impl<'a, T> Generator for &'a mut T where
    T: Generator + ?Sized, type Yield = <T as Generator>::Yield; type Return = <T as Generator>::Return;
© 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/std/ops/trait.Generator.html