I believe that the equivalent of the C# example would be returning ~Iterator<&str>
. This can be done, but must be written explicitly: rather than returning x
, return ~x as ~Iterator<&'a str>
. (By the way, your function is going to have to take &'a str
rather than ~str
—if you don’t know why, ask and I’ll explain.)
This is not, however, idiomatic Rust because it is needlessly inefficient. The idiomatic Rust is to list the return type explicitly. You can specify it in one place like this if you like:
use std::iter::{FilterMap, Map};
use std::str::CharSplits;
type Foo = FilterMap<'a, &'a str, &'a str,
Map<'a, &'a str, &'a str,
CharSplits<'a, char>>>
And then list Foo
as the return type.
Yes, this is cumbersome. At present, there is no such thing as inferring a return type in any way. This has, however, been discussed and I believe it likely that it will come eventually in some syntax similar to fn foo<'a>(&'a str) -> Iterator<&'a str>
. For now, though, there is no fancy sugar.