Hello,
As I said in the previous post that I have started learning Rust and made a simple fibonacci series generator. Today I made a palindrome string checker. it’s very basic. I haven’t used Enum or Struct in the code since I don’t think it’s necessary in this simple code.
here is the code:
use std::io;
fn main() {
let mut input = String::new();
let stdin = io::stdin();
stdin.read_line(&mut input).unwrap(); // we want to exit in case it couldn't read from stdin
input = input.replace("\n", ""); // Removing newline
let mut is_palindrome: bool = true;
for i in 0..input.len()/2 {
let first_char: &str = &input[i..i+1];
let last_char: &str = &input[input.len()-i-1..input.len()-i];
if first_char != "\n" {
if first_char != last_char {
is_palindrome = false;
}
}
}
println!("palindrome: {}", is_palindrome);
}
Such posts are more suitable as microblogs IMHO.
Anyway, string lengths are byte lengths, and indexing strings is actually not panic-safe. This is why we have (still-nightly) char-boundary methods now.
If you want to work on characters. use
.chars().count()
and.chars().nth()
.And character boundaries are themselves not always grapheme boundaries, which is also something that you might need to keep in mind when you start writing serious code.
With all that in mind, you should realize, for example, that probably every string reversing beginner exercise answer in every language is actually wrong. And the wrongness may actually start at the underspecified requirements 😉