Function std::ptr::write 1.0.0
[−]
[src]
pub unsafe fn write<T>(dst: *mut T, src: T)
Overwrites a memory location with the given value without reading or dropping the old value.
Safety
This operation is marked unsafe because it accepts a raw pointer.
It does not drop the contents of dst
. This is safe, but it could leak
allocations or resources, so care must be taken not to overwrite an object
that should be dropped.
Additionally, it does not drop src
. Semantically, src
is moved into the
location pointed to by dst
.
This is appropriate for initializing uninitialized memory, or overwriting
memory that has previously been read
from.
The pointer must be aligned; use write_unaligned
if that is not the case.
Examples
Basic usage:
let mut x = 0; let y = &mut x as *mut i32; let z = 12; unsafe { std::ptr::write(y, z); assert_eq!(std::ptr::read(y), 12); }Run