Dynamic Error Types
Sometimes we want to allow any type of error to be returned without writing our own enum covering
all the different possibilities. std::error::Error
makes this easy.
use std::fs::{self, File}; use std::io::Read; use thiserror::Error; use std::error::Error; #[derive(Clone, Debug, Eq, Error, PartialEq)] #[error("Found no username in {0}")] struct EmptyUsernameError(String); fn read_username(path: &str) -> Result<String, Box<dyn Error>> { let mut username = String::with_capacity(100); File::open(path)?.read_to_string(&mut username)?; if username.is_empty() { return Err(EmptyUsernameError(String::from(path)).into()); } Ok(username) } fn main() { //fs::write("config.dat", "").unwrap(); match read_username("config.dat") { Ok(username) => println!("Username: {username}"), Err(err) => println!("Error: {err}"), } }
This saves on code, but gives up the ability to cleanly handle different error cases differently in
the program. As such it’s generally not a good idea to use Box<dyn Error>
in the public API of a
library, but it can be a good option in a program where you just want to display the error message
somewhere.