Rust for the Novice Programmer/Basic Maths Testing Program/Getting Started

Getting Started with our Maths Program
Let's start a new program by going to a new folder in the terminal and typing 'cargo init'. Then we can open up main.rs in the src/ folder. Let's start off by writing a function to take in the numbers and print out the question to the terminal. fn print_question(num1: i32, num2: i32) { println!("What is {} + {}?", num1, num2); } And in our main function, we call it like so: fn main { print_question(35, 23); } And if we run this now with 'cargo run' we get What is 20 + 30? in the terminal.

However, this only works with addition. Let's make it work for both addition and subtraction. To represent the mathematical operator, we need something that can be one of a number of options. The perfect way to represent this is with an enum. So we create our enum as follows: enum Operator { Addition, Subtraction, }

Now, to display the operator, we can match against the operator and select the character for it, so we change our print_question function as follows: fn print_question(num1: i32, num2: i32, operator: Operator) { let operator_string = match operator { Operator::Addition => "+", Operator::Subtraction => "-", };     println!("What is {} {} {}?", num1, operator_string, num2); } And we can change our main function to: fn main { print_question(35, 23, Operator::Subtraction); } And now when we run cargo run, we get What is 35 - 23? in the terminal.

Next: we introduce traits as a cleaner way to display the operator.