Trait std::cmp::Ord 1.0.0[−][src]
pub trait Ord: Eq + PartialOrd<Self> {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering;
fn max(self, other: Self) -> Self { ... }
fn min(self, other: Self) -> Self { ... }
fn clamp(self, min: Self, max: Self) -> Self { ... }
}
Expand description
Trait for types that form a total order.
Implementations must be consistent with the PartialOrd
implementation, and ensure
max
, min
, and clamp
are consistent with cmp
:
partial_cmp(a, b) == Some(cmp(a, b))
.max(a, b) == max_by(a, b, cmp)
(ensured by the default implementation).min(a, b) == min_by(a, b, cmp)
(ensured by the default implementation).- For
a.clamp(min, max)
, see the method docs (ensured by the default implementation).
It’s easy to accidentally make cmp
and partial_cmp
disagree by
deriving some of the traits and manually implementing others.
Corollaries
From the above and the requirements of PartialOrd
, it follows that <
defines a strict total order.
This means that for all a
, b
and c
:
- exactly one of
a < b
,a == b
ora > b
is true; and <
is transitive:a < b
andb < c
impliesa < c
. The same must hold for both==
and>
.
Derivable
This trait can be used with #[derive]
. When derive
d on structs, it will produce a
lexicographic ordering based on the top-to-bottom declaration order of the struct’s members.
When derive
d on enums, variants are ordered by their top-to-bottom discriminant order.
Lexicographical comparison
Lexicographical comparison is an operation with the following properties:
- Two sequences are compared element by element.
- The first mismatching element defines which sequence is lexicographically less or greater than the other.
- If one sequence is a prefix of another, the shorter sequence is lexicographically less than the other.
- If two sequence have equivalent elements and are of the same length, then the sequences are lexicographically equal.
- An empty sequence is lexicographically less than any non-empty sequence.
- Two empty sequences are lexicographically equal.
How can I implement Ord
?
Ord
requires that the type also be PartialOrd
and Eq
(which requires PartialEq
).
Then you must define an implementation for cmp
. You may find it useful to use
cmp
on your type’s fields.
Here’s an example where you want to sort people by height only, disregarding id
and name
:
use std::cmp::Ordering;
#[derive(Eq)]
struct Person {
id: u32,
name: String,
height: u32,
}
impl Ord for Person {
fn cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Ordering {
self.height.cmp(&other.height)
}
}
impl PartialOrd for Person {
fn partial_cmp(&self, other: &Self) -> Option<Ordering> {
Some(self.cmp(other))
}
}
impl PartialEq for Person {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
self.height == other.height
}
}
RunRequired methods
This method returns an Ordering
between self
and other
.
By convention, self.cmp(&other)
returns the ordering matching the expression
self <operator> other
if true.
Examples
use std::cmp::Ordering;
assert_eq!(5.cmp(&10), Ordering::Less);
assert_eq!(10.cmp(&5), Ordering::Greater);
assert_eq!(5.cmp(&5), Ordering::Equal);
Run