Tokens
Tokens are primitive productions in the grammar defined by regular (non-recursive) languages. "Simple" tokens are given in string table production form, and occur in the rest of the grammar as double-quoted strings. Other tokens have exact rules given.
Literals
A literal is an expression consisting of a single token, rather than a sequence of tokens, that immediately and directly denotes the value it evaluates to, rather than referring to it by name or some other evaluation rule. A literal is a form of constant expression, so is evaluated (primarily) at compile time.
Examples
Characters and strings
Example | # sets | Characters | Escapes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Character | 'H' | N/A | All Unicode | Quote & ASCII & Unicode |
String | "hello" | N/A | All Unicode | Quote & ASCII & Unicode |
Raw | r#"hello"# | 0... | All Unicode | N/A |
Byte | b'H' | N/A | All ASCII | Quote & Byte |
Byte string | b"hello" | N/A | All ASCII | Quote & Byte |
Raw byte string | br#"hello"# | 0... | All ASCII | N/A |
ASCII escapes
Name | |
---|---|
\x41 | 7-bit character code (exactly 2 digits, up to 0x7F) |
\n | Newline |
\r | Carriage return |
\t | Tab |
\\ | Backslash |
\0 | Null |
Byte escapes
Name | |
---|---|
\x7F | 8-bit character code (exactly 2 digits) |
\n | Newline |
\r | Carriage return |
\t | Tab |
\\ | Backslash |
\0 | Null |
Unicode escapes
Name | |
---|---|
\u{7FFF} | 24-bit Unicode character code (up to 6 digits) |
Quote escapes
Name | |
---|---|
\' | Single quote |
\" | Double quote |
Numbers
Number literals* | Example | Exponentiation | Suffixes |
---|---|---|---|
Decimal integer | 98_222 | N/A | Integer suffixes |
Hex integer | 0xff | N/A | Integer suffixes |
Octal integer | 0o77 | N/A | Integer suffixes |
Binary integer | 0b1111_0000 | N/A | Integer suffixes |
Floating-point | 123.0E+77 | Optional | Floating-point suffixes |
*
All number literals allow _
as a visual separator: 1_234.0E+18f64
Suffixes
Integer | Floating-point |
---|---|
u8 , i8 , u16 , i16 , u32 , i32 , u64 , i64 , isize , usize | f32 , f64 |
Character and string literals
Character literals
Lexer
CHAR_LITERAL :
'
( ~['
\
\n \r \t] | QUOTE_ESCAPE | ASCII_ESCAPE | UNICODE_ESCAPE )'
QUOTE_ESCAPE :
\'
|\"
ASCII_ESCAPE :
\x
OCT_DIGIT HEX_DIGIT
|\n
|\r
|\t
|\\
|\0
UNICODE_ESCAPE :
\u{
( HEX_DIGIT_
* )1..6}
A character literal is a single Unicode character enclosed within two
U+0027
(single-quote) characters, with the exception of U+0027
itself,
which must be escaped by a preceding U+005C
character (\
).
String literals
Lexer
STRING_LITERAL :
"
(
~["
\
IsolatedCR]
| QUOTE_ESCAPE
| ASCII_ESCAPE
| UNICODE_ESCAPE
| STRING_CONTINUE
)*"
STRING_CONTINUE :
\
followed by \n
A string literal is a sequence of any Unicode characters enclosed within two
U+0022
(double-quote) characters, with the exception of U+0022
itself,
which must be escaped by a preceding U+005C
character (\
).
Line-break characters are allowed in string literals. Normally they represent
themselves (i.e. no translation), but as a special exception, when an unescaped
U+005C
character (\
) occurs immediately before the newline (U+000A
), the
U+005C
character, the newline, and all whitespace at the beginning of the
next line are ignored. Thus a
and b
are equal:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { let a = "foobar"; let b = "foo\ bar"; assert_eq!(a,b); #}
Character escapes
Some additional escapes are available in either character or non-raw string
literals. An escape starts with a U+005C
(\
) and continues with one of the
following forms:
- An 8-bit code point escape starts with
U+0078
(x
) and is followed by exactly two hex digits. It denotes the Unicode code point equal to the provided hex value. - A 24-bit code point escape starts with
U+0075
(u
) and is followed by up to six hex digits surrounded by bracesU+007B
({
) andU+007D
(}
). It denotes the Unicode code point equal to the provided hex value. - A whitespace escape is one of the characters
U+006E
(n
),U+0072
(r
), orU+0074
(t
), denoting the Unicode valuesU+000A
(LF),U+000D
(CR) orU+0009
(HT) respectively. - The null escape is the character
U+0030
(0
) and denotes the Unicode valueU+0000
(NUL). - The backslash escape is the character
U+005C
(\
) which must be escaped in order to denote itself.
Raw string literals
Lexer
RAW_STRING_LITERAL :
r
RAW_STRING_CONTENTRAW_STRING_CONTENT :
"
( ~ IsolatedCR )* (non-greedy)"
|#
RAW_STRING_CONTENT#
Raw string literals do not process any escapes. They start with the character
U+0072
(r
), followed by zero or more of the character U+0023
(#
) and a
U+0022
(double-quote) character. The raw string body can contain any sequence
of Unicode characters and is terminated only by another U+0022
(double-quote)
character, followed by the same number of U+0023
(#
) characters that preceded
the opening U+0022
(double-quote) character.
All Unicode characters contained in the raw string body represent themselves,
the characters U+0022
(double-quote) (except when followed by at least as
many U+0023
(#
) characters as were used to start the raw string literal) or
U+005C
(\
) do not have any special meaning.
Examples for string literals:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { "foo"; r"foo"; // foo "\"foo\""; r#""foo""#; // "foo" "foo #\"# bar"; r##"foo #"# bar"##; // foo #"# bar "\x52"; "R"; r"R"; // R "\\x52"; r"\x52"; // \x52 #}
Byte and byte string literals
Byte literals
Lexer
BYTE_LITERAL :
b'
( ASCII_FOR_CHAR | BYTE_ESCAPE )'
ASCII_FOR_CHAR :
any ASCII (i.e. 0x00 to 0x7F), except'
,/
, \n, \r or \tBYTE_ESCAPE :
\x
HEX_DIGIT HEX_DIGIT
|\n
|\r
|\t
|\\
|\0
A byte literal is a single ASCII character (in the U+0000
to U+007F
range) or a single escape preceded by the characters U+0062
(b
) and
U+0027
(single-quote), and followed by the character U+0027
. If the character
U+0027
is present within the literal, it must be escaped by a preceding
U+005C
(\
) character. It is equivalent to a u8
unsigned 8-bit integer
number literal.
Byte string literals
Lexer
BYTE_STRING_LITERAL :
b"
( ASCII_FOR_STRING | BYTE_ESCAPE | STRING_CONTINUE )*"
ASCII_FOR_STRING :
any ASCII (i.e 0x00 to 0x7F), except"
,/
and IsolatedCR
A non-raw byte string literal is a sequence of ASCII characters and escapes,
preceded by the characters U+0062
(b
) and U+0022
(double-quote), and
followed by the character U+0022
. If the character U+0022
is present within
the literal, it must be escaped by a preceding U+005C
(\
) character.
Alternatively, a byte string literal can be a raw byte string literal, defined
below. A byte string literal of length n
is equivalent to a &'static [u8; n]
borrowed fixed-sized array
of unsigned 8-bit integers.
Some additional escapes are available in either byte or non-raw byte string
literals. An escape starts with a U+005C
(\
) and continues with one of the
following forms:
- A byte escape escape starts with
U+0078
(x
) and is followed by exactly two hex digits. It denotes the byte equal to the provided hex value. - A whitespace escape is one of the characters
U+006E
(n
),U+0072
(r
), orU+0074
(t
), denoting the bytes values0x0A
(ASCII LF),0x0D
(ASCII CR) or0x09
(ASCII HT) respectively. - The null escape is the character
U+0030
(0
) and denotes the byte value0x00
(ASCII NUL). - The backslash escape is the character
U+005C
(\
) which must be escaped in order to denote its ASCII encoding0x5C
.
Raw byte string literals
Lexer
RAW_BYTE_STRING_LITERAL :
br
RAW_BYTE_STRING_CONTENTRAW_BYTE_STRING_CONTENT :
"
ASCII* (non-greedy)"
|#
RAW_STRING_CONTENT#
ASCII :
any ASCII (i.e. 0x00 to 0x7F)
Raw byte string literals do not process any escapes. They start with the
character U+0062
(b
), followed by U+0072
(r
), followed by zero or more
of the character U+0023
(#
), and a U+0022
(double-quote) character. The
raw string body can contain any sequence of ASCII characters and is terminated
only by another U+0022
(double-quote) character, followed by the same number of
U+0023
(#
) characters that preceded the opening U+0022
(double-quote)
character. A raw byte string literal can not contain any non-ASCII byte.
All characters contained in the raw string body represent their ASCII encoding,
the characters U+0022
(double-quote) (except when followed by at least as
many U+0023
(#
) characters as were used to start the raw string literal) or
U+005C
(\
) do not have any special meaning.
Examples for byte string literals:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { b"foo"; br"foo"; // foo b"\"foo\""; br#""foo""#; // "foo" b"foo #\"# bar"; br##"foo #"# bar"##; // foo #"# bar b"\x52"; b"R"; br"R"; // R b"\\x52"; br"\x52"; // \x52 #}
Number literals
A number literal is either an integer literal or a floating-point literal. The grammar for recognizing the two kinds of literals is mixed.
Integer literals
Lexer
INTEGER_LITERAL :
( DEC_LITERAL | BIN_LITERAL | OCT_LITERAL | HEX_LITERAL ) INTEGER_SUFFIX?DEC_LITERAL :
DEC_DIGIT (DEC_DIGIT|_
)*BIN_LITERAL :
0b
(BIN_DIGIT|_
)* BIN_DIGIT (BIN_DIGIT|_
)*OCT_LITERAL :
0o
(OCT_DIGIT|_
)* OCT_DIGIT (OCT_DIGIT|_
)*HEX_LITERAL :
0x
(HEX_DIGIT|_
)* HEX_DIGIT (HEX_DIGIT|_
)*BIN_DIGIT : [
0
-1
]OCT_DIGIT : [
0
-7
]DEC_DIGIT : [
0
-9
]HEX_DIGIT : [
0
-9
a
-f
A
-F
]INTEGER_SUFFIX :
u8
|u16
|u32
|u64
|usize
|i8
|i16
|i32
|i64
|isize
An integer literal has one of four forms:
- A decimal literal starts with a decimal digit and continues with any mixture of decimal digits and underscores.
- A hex literal starts with the character sequence
U+0030
U+0078
(0x
) and continues as any mixture (with at least one digit) of hex digits and underscores. - An octal literal starts with the character sequence
U+0030
U+006F
(0o
) and continues as any mixture (with at least one digit) of octal digits and underscores. - A binary literal starts with the character sequence
U+0030
U+0062
(0b
) and continues as any mixture (with at least one digit) of binary digits and underscores.
Like any literal, an integer literal may be followed (immediately,
without any spaces) by an integer suffix, which forcibly sets the
type of the literal. The integer suffix must be the name of one of the
integral types: u8
, i8
, u16
, i16
, u32
, i32
, u64
, i64
,
isize
, or usize
.
The type of an unsuffixed integer literal is determined by type inference:
-
If an integer type can be uniquely determined from the surrounding program context, the unsuffixed integer literal has that type.
-
If the program context under-constrains the type, it defaults to the signed 32-bit integer
i32
. -
If the program context over-constrains the type, it is considered a static type error.
Examples of integer literals of various forms:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { 123; // type i32 123i32; // type i32 123u32; // type u32 123_u32; // type u32 let a: u64 = 123; // type u64 0xff; // type i32 0xff_u8; // type u8 0o70; // type i32 0o70_i16; // type i16 0b1111_1111_1001_0000; // type i32 0b1111_1111_1001_0000i64; // type i64 0b________1; // type i32 0usize; // type usize #}
Examples of invalid integer literals:
// invalid suffixes
0invalidSuffix;
// uses numbers of the wrong base
123AFB43;
0b0102;
0o0581;
// integers too big for their type (they overflow)
128_i8;
256_u8;
// bin, hex and octal literals must have at least one digit
0b_;
0b____;
Note that the Rust syntax considers -1i8
as an application of the unary minus
operator to an integer literal 1i8
, rather than
a single integer literal.
Floating-point literals
Lexer
FLOAT_LITERAL :
DEC_LITERAL.
(not immediately followed by.
,_
or an identifier)
| DEC_LITERAL FLOAT_EXPONENT
| DEC_LITERAL.
DEC_LITERAL FLOAT_EXPONENT?
| DEC_LITERAL (.
DEC_LITERAL)? FLOAT_EXPONENT? FLOAT_SUFFIXFLOAT_EXPONENT :
(e
|E
) (+
|-
)? (DEC_DIGIT|_
)* DEC_DIGIT (DEC_DIGIT|_
)*FLOAT_SUFFIX :
f32
|f64
A floating-point literal has one of two forms:
- A decimal literal followed by a period character
U+002E
(.
). This is optionally followed by another decimal literal, with an optional exponent. - A single decimal literal followed by an exponent.
Like integer literals, a floating-point literal may be followed by a
suffix, so long as the pre-suffix part does not end with U+002E
(.
).
The suffix forcibly sets the type of the literal. There are two valid
floating-point suffixes, f32
and f64
(the 32-bit and 64-bit floating point
types), which explicitly determine the type of the literal.
The type of an unsuffixed floating-point literal is determined by type inference:
-
If a floating-point type can be uniquely determined from the surrounding program context, the unsuffixed floating-point literal has that type.
-
If the program context under-constrains the type, it defaults to
f64
. -
If the program context over-constrains the type, it is considered a static type error.
Examples of floating-point literals of various forms:
# #![allow(unused_variables)] #fn main() { 123.0f64; // type f64 0.1f64; // type f64 0.1f32; // type f32 12E+99_f64; // type f64 let x: f64 = 2.; // type f64 #}
This last example is different because it is not possible to use the suffix
syntax with a floating point literal ending in a period. 2.f64
would attempt
to call a method named f64
on 2
.
The representation semantics of floating-point numbers are described in "Machine Types".
Boolean literals
Lexer
BOOLEAN_LITERAL :
true
|false
The two values of the boolean type are written true
and false
.
Symbols
Symbols are a general class of printable tokens that play structural roles in a variety of grammar productions. They are a set of remaining miscellaneous printable tokens that do not otherwise appear as unary operators, binary operators, or keywords. They are catalogued in the Symbols section of the Grammar document.