fn get_links(link_nodes: Select) -> Option<String> {

        let mut rel_permalink: Option<String> = for node in link_nodes {
            link = String::from(node.value().attr("href")?);

            return Some(link);
        };

        Some(rel_permalink)
    }

This is what I’m trying to do, and I’ve been stuck with this code for an hour, I simply don’t know how to put this function togheter… Essentially I would like to take some link_nodes and just return the link String, but I’m stuck in the use of Option with the ? operator… Pheraps trying to write it with match would clear things out(?)

Also I come from JavaScript in which expressions do not have their own scope, meaning I’m having troubles to understand how to get out a variable from a for loop, should I initialize the rel_permalink variable as the for loop result?

This are the errors i get:

error[E0308]: mismatched types
  --> src/main.rs:55:49
   |
55 |           let mut rel_permalink: Option<String> = for node in link_nodes {
   |  _________________________________________________^
56 | |             link = String::from(node.value().attr("href")?);
57 | |
58 | |             return Some(link);
59 | |         };
   | |_________^ expected `Option<String>`, found `()`
   |
   = note:   expected enum `Option<String>`
           found unit type `()`
note: the function expects a value to always be returned, but loops might run zero times
  --> src/main.rs:55:49
   |
55 |         let mut rel_permalink: Option<String> = for node in link_nodes {
   |                                                 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ this might have zero elements to iterate on
56 |             link = String::from(node.value().attr("href")?);
   |                                                          - if the loop doesn't execute, this value would never get returned
57 |
58 |             return Some(link);
   |             ----------------- if the loop doesn't execute, this value would never get returned
   = help: return a value for the case when the loop has zero elements to iterate on, or consider changing the return type to account for that possibility
  • gigapixel@mastodontti.fi
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    1 month ago

    @dontblink e.g.

    enum OsResponseType {  
     Message { message: String },  
     Bool(bool),  
    }
    
    fn find\_os(os: OperativeSystem) -\> OsResponseType {  
     match os {  
     OperativeSystem::Linux =\> OsResponseType::Message {  
     message: "This pc uses Linux".into(),  
     },  
     OperativeSystem::Windows =\> OsResponseType::Bool(false),  
     OperativeSystem::Mac =\> OsResponseType::Bool(true),  
     \_ =\> OsResponseType::Bool(false),  
     }  
    }  
    

    Note the logic here is nonsense

    • gigapixel@mastodontti.fi
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      1 month ago

      @dontblink It feels like you should never OsResponseType::Bool(true) so you could probably encode that in the enum just as the same Unrecognised

      enum OsResponseType {  
       Message { message: String },  
       Unrecognised  
      }  
      
      • dontblink@feddit.itOP
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        1 month ago

        Thank you so much, You are taking a lot of effort to answer my doubts and I really appreciate!

        So essentially match can return different types, but of course I have to specify it in the function signature, wheter using an enum or other ways, this makes sense! This was a missing piece in my puzzle, I didn’t consider the fact that the match return here was the function return type as well, and i had encoded -> String as return type.