The Result struct
In Rust, the
Result<T, E>
struct is used to abstract both a successful response (if it exists) and an error (if it occurs). Let's better understand through an example.Consider that you have a function
divide(num1, num2)
, which executes the division between two numbers. As you already know, dividing by 0 is undefined, and generates an error in Rust. You can use Result
to return a controlled error.fn divide(num1: u32, num2: u32) -> Result<u32, String> {
if num2 == 0 {
return Err(String::from("You can't divide by 0"));
}
return Ok(num1 / num2);
}
fn main() {
let result = divide(6, 0);
if result.is_ok() {
println!("This is the happy path: {}", result.unwrap())
} else {
println!("This is the error: {}", result.err().unwrap())
}
}
Let's inspect the
divide
function:fn divide(num1: u32, num2: u32) -> Result<u32, String> { // 1.
if num2 == 0 {
return Err(String::from("You can't divide by 0")); // 2.
}
return Ok(num1 / num2); // 3.
}
- 1.Declaration of the function. Two unsigned numbers of 32-bit length are passed as parameters. The return type is
Result<u32, String>
: the first type (u32
) is for the successful response, and the second type (String
) is for the error response. - 2.If dividing by 0, you return an error String.
- 3.If not, you return the result of the division (
u32
).
The
Result<T, E>
is really an enum that can take two values: Ok(T)
(success) and Err(E)
(error).In the previous code, when you return
Err(String)
, the success part is automatically empty. At the same time, when you return Ok(u32)
, the error part is empty.Now, let's see how you can interact with this result.
fn main() {
let result = divide(6, 0); // 1.
if result.is_ok() { // 2.
println!("This is the happy path: {}", result.unwrap())
} else { // 3.
println!("This is the error: {}", result.err().unwrap())
}
}
- 1.You invoke the function and store the
Result<T,E>
enum in a variable. - 2.If the result is ok (i.e. the happy path has been returned), you can take its value by using the
result.unwrap()
method. - 3.If the error has been returned, you can return the error string by using the
result.err().unwrap()
method.
The output of the program for
divide(6,2)
(happy path) is:This is the happy path: 3
The output of the program for
divide(6,0)
(error) is:This is the error: You can't divide by 0
Checking with an
if
condition whether the result contains an error is a valid approach. However, Rust includes a shortcut to improve this.In the previous example, consider that you want to invoke the
divide
function from another function that performs other computations.fn divide(num1: u32, num2: u32) -> Result<u32, String> {
if num2 == 0 {
return Err(String::from("You can't divide by 0"));
}
return Ok(num1 / num2);
}
fn computations() -> Result<u32, String> {
let result = divide(6, 0); // Performing the division
if result.is_err() { // If the division returns an error, then you return an error.
return Err(result.err().unwrap());
}
let division_result = result.unwrap();
return Ok(division_result + 5);
}
fn main() {
let result = computations();
if result.is_ok() {
println!("This is the happy path: {}", result.unwrap())
} else {
println!("This is the error: {}", result.err().unwrap())
}
}
Now, the Rust program adds
5
to the result of the division, checking that the division is correct first. Although this approach is correct, Rust provides a ?
symbol that simplifies the logic:fn divide(num1: u32, num2: u32) -> Result<u32, String> {
if num2 == 0 {
return Err(String::from("You can't divide by 0"));
}
return Ok(num1 / num2);
}
fn computations() -> Result<u32, String> {
let division_result = divide(6, 0)?;
return Ok(division_result + 5);
}
fn main() {
let result = computations();
if result.is_ok() {
println!("This is the happy path: {}", result.unwrap())
} else {
println!("This is the error: {}", result.err().unwrap())
}
}
The
?
symbol after a Result
enum does two things:- 1.If successful, it unwraps the result (in this case, a
u32
number), and stores it in a variablelet division_result = divide(6, 0)?;
- 2.If an error occurs, it returns the error directly. In this example, the error type of the
divide
and thecomputations
function is the same (aString
).
The
Result
enum is used in Substreams to return the data (or the errors) of a module. For example, if you take the map_filter_transactions
module from the Ethereum Explorer tutorial:[...]
#[substreams::handlers::map]
fn map_filter_transactions(params: String, blk: Block) -> Result<Transactions, Vec<substreams::errors::Error>> {
let filters = parse_filters_from_params(params)?;
let transactions: Vec<Transaction> = blk
.transactions()
.filter(|trans| apply_filter(&trans, &filters))
.map(|trans| Transaction {
from: Hex::encode(&trans.from),
to: Hex::encode(&trans.to),
hash: Hex::encode(&trans.hash),
})
.collect();
Ok(Transactions { transactions })
}
[...]
This module returns a
Result<Transactions, Vec<substreams::errors::Error>>
enum. If successful, it returns the transactions filtered; in the case of an error, it returns the substreams::errors::Error
error, which is a Substreams wrapper for a generic anyhow Rust error.Last modified 2d ago