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Function std::ptr::write

pub unsafe fn write<T>(dst: *mut T, src: T)

Overwrites a memory location with the given value without reading or dropping the old value.

Safety

This operation is marked unsafe because it accepts a raw pointer.

It does not drop the contents of dst. This is safe, but it could leak allocations or resources, so care must be taken not to overwrite an object that should be dropped.

Additionally, it does not drop src. Semantically, src is moved into the location pointed to by dst.

This is appropriate for initializing uninitialized memory, or overwriting memory that has previously been read from.

The pointer must be aligned; use write_unaligned if that is not the case.

Examples

Basic usage:

let mut x = 0;
let y = &mut x as *mut i32;
let z = 12;

unsafe {
    std::ptr::write(y, z);
    assert_eq!(std::ptr::read(y), 12);
}

© 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/ptr/fn.write.html