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address review feedback

Adjust error text and naming to conform with best practices.
Use `map_err()` instead of `or()`. Wrap lower-level errors instead of
ignoring their details.

Also, don't "cheat" by bypassing the `new()` function in tests.

Fix a dangling reference in the try_from_into hints.
This commit is contained in:
Taylor Yu 2021-06-09 18:13:57 -05:00
parent 68d3ac567c
commit b7ddd09fab
3 changed files with 35 additions and 23 deletions

View File

@ -43,8 +43,8 @@ impl PositiveNonzeroInteger {
impl fmt::Display for CreationError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
let description = match *self {
CreationError::Negative => "Number is negative",
CreationError::Zero => "Number is zero",
CreationError::Negative => "number is negative",
CreationError::Zero => "number is zero",
};
f.write_str(description)
}

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@ -10,11 +10,20 @@
// I AM NOT DONE
use std::num::ParseIntError;
// This is a custom error type that we will be using in `parse_pos_nonzero()`.
#[derive(PartialEq, Debug)]
enum ParsePosNonzeroError {
CreationError,
ParseIntError
Creation(CreationError),
ParseInt(ParseIntError)
}
impl ParsePosNonzeroError {
fn from_creation(err: CreationError) -> ParsePosNonzeroError {
ParsePosNonzeroError::Creation(err)
}
// TODO: add another error conversion function here.
}
fn parse_pos_nonzero(s: &str)
@ -24,7 +33,7 @@ fn parse_pos_nonzero(s: &str)
// when `parse()` returns an error.
let x: i64 = s.parse().unwrap();
PositiveNonzeroInteger::new(x)
.or(Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::CreationError))
.map_err(ParsePosNonzeroError::from_creation)
}
// Don't change anything below this line.
@ -54,17 +63,18 @@ mod test {
#[test]
fn test_parse_error() {
assert_eq!(
// We can't construct a ParseIntError, so we have to pattern match.
assert!(matches!(
parse_pos_nonzero("not a number"),
Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::ParseIntError)
);
Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::ParseInt(_))
));
}
#[test]
fn test_negative() {
assert_eq!(
parse_pos_nonzero("-555"),
Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::CreationError)
Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::Creation(CreationError::Negative))
);
}
@ -72,15 +82,14 @@ mod test {
fn test_zero() {
assert_eq!(
parse_pos_nonzero("0"),
Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::CreationError)
Err(ParsePosNonzeroError::Creation(CreationError::Zero))
);
}
#[test]
fn test_positive() {
assert_eq!(
parse_pos_nonzero("42"),
Ok(PositiveNonzeroInteger(42))
);
let x = PositiveNonzeroInteger::new(42);
assert!(x.is_ok());
assert_eq!(parse_pos_nonzero("42"), Ok(x.unwrap()));
}
}

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@ -532,16 +532,19 @@ path = "exercises/error_handling/errors6.rs"
mode = "test"
hint = """
This exercise uses a completed version of `PositiveNonzeroInteger` from
the errors4.
errors4.
Below the TODO line, there is an example of using the `.or()` method
on a `Result` to transform one type of error into another. Try using
something similar on the `Result` from `parse()`. You might use the `?`
operator to return early from the function, or you might use a `match`
expression, or maybe there's another way!
Below the line that TODO asks you to change, there is an example of using
the `map_err()` method on a `Result` to transform one type of error into
another. Try using something similar on the `Result` from `parse()`. You
might use the `?` operator to return early from the function, or you might
use a `match` expression, or maybe there's another way!
Read more about `.or()` in the `std::result` documentation:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.or"""
You can create another function inside `impl ParsePosNonzeroError` to use
with `map_err()`.
Read more about `map_err()` in the `std::result` documentation:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/result/enum.Result.html#method.map_err"""
# Generics
@ -927,7 +930,7 @@ hint = """
Follow the steps provided right before the `TryFrom` implementation.
You can also use the example at https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/trait.TryFrom.html
You might want to look back at the exercise errorsn (or its hints) to remind
You might want to look back at the exercise errors5 (or its hints) to remind
yourself about how `Box<dyn Error>` works.
If you're trying to return a string as an error, note that neither `str`