| # Variable Bindings |
| |
| Rust provides type safety via static typing. Variable bindings can be type |
| annotated when declared. However, in most cases, the compiler will be able |
| to infer the type of the variable from the context, heavily reducing the |
| annotation burden. |
| |
| Values (like literals) can be bound to variables, using the `let` binding. |
| |
| ```rust,editable |
| fn main() { |
| let an_integer = 1u32; |
| let a_boolean = true; |
| let unit = (); |
| |
| // copy `an_integer` into `copied_integer` |
| let copied_integer = an_integer; |
| |
| println!("An integer: {:?}", copied_integer); |
| println!("A boolean: {:?}", a_boolean); |
| println!("Meet the unit value: {:?}", unit); |
| |
| // The compiler warns about unused variable bindings; these warnings can |
| // be silenced by prefixing the variable name with an underscore |
| let _unused_variable = 3u32; |
| |
| let noisy_unused_variable = 2u32; |
| // FIXME ^ Prefix with an underscore to suppress the warning |
| // Please note that warnings may not be shown in a browser |
| } |
| ``` |