Description
Proposal
Problem statement
It is awkward to use Iterator::zip
for tuples of larger arities than 2, as you need to chain calls to zip and iter() in the right places, as well as wrap your head around the correct nesting of the tuples. Implementing IntoIterator
for tuples would make it very natural to call.
Motivating examples or use cases
Here's a small example of two ways to use the IntoIterator
impl.
let a_s = vec![1, 3, 5];
let b_s = vec![2, 4, 6];
for (a, b) in (&a_s, &b_s) {
assert!(*a + 1 == *b);
}
let v = (a_s, b_s).into_iter().collect::<Vec<_>>();
assert_eq!(v, vec![(1, 2), (3, 4), (5, 6)]);
itertools
has also identified that nested tuples can be confusing, and added a convenience helper method (https://docs.rs/itertools/latest/itertools/fn.cons_tuples.html).
In addition, it would play nice with the upcoming stabilizations of Extend
and FromIterator
for tuples.
Solution sketch
The implementations are pretty straight forward. Specialization similar to what is done in Zip
could be added, as well, but isn't required just to get the API out there.
Alternatives
Do nothing and keep using chained zip
calls and nested tuples.
Links and related work
This was already discussed many years ago with the intent to replace zip
: rust-lang/rfcs#870. An old RFC discussion was begun in rust-lang/rfcs#930.
What happens now?
This issue contains an API change proposal (or ACP) and is part of the libs-api team feature lifecycle. Once this issue is filed, the libs-api team will review open proposals as capability becomes available. Current response times do not have a clear estimate, but may be up to several months.
Possible responses
The libs team may respond in various different ways. First, the team will consider the problem (this doesn't require any concrete solution or alternatives to have been proposed):
- We think this problem seems worth solving, and the standard library might be the right place to solve it.
- We think that this probably doesn't belong in the standard library.
Second, if there's a concrete solution:
- We think this specific solution looks roughly right, approved, you or someone else should implement this. (Further review will still happen on the subsequent implementation PR.)
- We're not sure this is the right solution, and the alternatives or other materials don't give us enough information to be sure about that. Here are some questions we have that aren't answered, or rough ideas about alternatives we'd want to see discussed.