use std::mem; // This function borrows a slice fn analyze_slice(slice: &[i32]){ println!("first element of the slice: {}", slice[0]); println!("the slice has {} elements", slice.len()); } fn main(){ //Fixed-size array (type signature is superfluous) let xs: [i32; 5] = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]; //All elements can be initialized to the same value let ys: [i32; 500] = [0; 500]; //Indexing starts at 0 println!("first element of the array: {}", xs[0]); println!("second element of the array: {}", xs[1]); //`len` returns the size of the array println!("array size: {}", xs.len()); //Arrays are stack allocated println!("array occupies {} bytes", mem::size_of_val(&xs)); //Arrays can be automatically borrowed as slices println!("borrow the whole array as a slice"); analyze_slice(&xs); //Slices can point to a section of an array //They are of the form [starting_index..ending_index] //starting_index is the first position in the slice //ending_index is one more than the last position in the slice println!("borrow a section of the array as a slice"); analyze_slice(&ys[1 .. 4]); //Out of bound indexing causes compile error //println!("{}", xs[5]); }