What is this question mark operator about?

It is a postfix operator that unwraps Result<T, E> and Option<T> values.

If applied to Result<T, E>, it unwraps the result and gives you the inner value, propagating the error to the calling function.

let number = "42".parse::<i32>()?;
println!("{:?}", number); // 42

When applied to an Option<T>, it propagates None to the caller, leaving you the content of the Some branch to deal with.

let val = Some(42)?;
println!("{:?}", val); // 42

The ? operator can only be used in a function that returns Result or Option like so:

use std::num::ParseIntError;

fn main() -> Result<(), ParseIntError> {
    let number = "42".parse::<i32>()?;
    println!("{:?}", number);
    Ok(())
}

It is a convenience offered by Rust, that eliminates boilerplate code and makes function's implementation simpler.


As you may have noticed, Rust does not have exceptions. It has panics, but their use for error-handling is discouraged (they are meant for unrecoverable errors).

In Rust, error handling uses Result. A typical example would be:

fn halves_if_even(i: i32) -> Result<i32, Error> {
    if i % 2 == 0 {
        Ok(i / 2)
    } else {
        Err(/* something */)
    }
}

fn do_the_thing(i: i32) -> Result<i32, Error> {
    let i = match halves_if_even(i) {
        Ok(i) => i,
        Err(e) => return Err(e),
    };

    // use `i`
}

This is great because:

  • when writing the code you cannot accidentally forget to deal with the error,
  • when reading the code you can immediately see that there is a potential for error right here.

It's less than ideal, however, in that it is very verbose. This is where the question mark operator ? comes in.

The above can be rewritten as:

fn do_the_thing(i: i32) -> Result<i32, Error> {
    let i = halves_if_even(i)?;

    // use `i`
}

which is much more concise.

What ? does here is equivalent to the match statement above with an addition. In short:

  1. It unpacks the Result if OK
  2. It returns the error if not, calling From::from on the error value to potentially convert it to another type.

It's a bit magic, but error handling needs some magic to cut down the boilerplate, and unlike exceptions it is immediately visible which function calls may or may not error out: those that are adorned with ?.

One example of the magic is that this also works for Option:

// Assume
// fn halves_if_even(i: i32) -> Option<i32>

fn do_the_thing(i: i32) -> Option<i32> {
    let i = halves_if_even(i)?;

    // use `i`
}

The ? operator, stabilized in Rust version 1.13.0 is powered by the (unstable) Try trait.

See also:

  • Is the question mark operator ? equivalent to the try! macro?
  • Why do try!() and ? not compile when used in a function that doesn't return Option or Result?

Tags:

Rust