问题
Let's consider the following examples:
main.rs
use futures::executor::block_on;
use futures::future::{FutureExt, TryFutureExt};
async fn fut1() -> Result<String, u32> {
Ok("ok".to_string())
}
fn main() {
println!("Hello, world!");
match block_on(fut1().and_then(|x| async move { Ok(format!("{} is \"ok\"", x)) })) {
Ok(s) => println!("{}", s),
Err(u) => println!("{}", u)
};
}
Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
futures = "^0.3"
I'm asking about the expression |x| async move {} instead of async move |x| {}. The latter is more obvious, but it runs into the compilation error:
error[E0658]: async closures are unstable
Then I wonder, what is the difference between async move || {} and || async move {}. They both seems to be closures for using the move keyword.
$ rustc --version
rustc 1.39.0 (4560ea788 2019-11-04)
回答1:
One is the async block (a closure with async block as its body to be precise), while the other is async closure. Per async/await RFC:
async ||closuresIn addition to functions, async can also be applied to closures. Like an async function, an async closure has a return type of
impl Future<Output = T>, rather thanT.
On the other hand:
asyncblocksYou can create a future directly as an expression using an
asyncblock. This form is almost equivalent to an immediately-invokedasyncclosure:async { /* body */ } // is equivalent to (async || { /* body */ })()except that control-flow constructs like
return,breakandcontinueare not allowed within body.
The move keyword here is to denote that the async closure and block are to capture ownership of the variables they close over.
And apparently, async closure is still deemed to be unstable. It has this tracking issue.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/59156473/what-is-the-difference-between-async-move-and-async-move