Functions
Functions are defined with the fn keyword. The return type of the function must be declared if a function returns any value.
fn <name>( <type> arg1, <type> arg2, ... ) -> <return type> {
// Arguments are immutable
// Any variables declared inside are scoped to the function
}
Example function:
fn hello(int a, int b) -> str {
a = 2 // Error
mut int b = b // Creates new scoped variable `b`, let's call it `bscope`.
b = 2 // This will edit `bscope`, not the argument value `b`
return "Hello, world!"
}
// `bscope` is not available here
str hello = hello(a, b) // pass in `int a` and `int b` from above
print(hello)
If a function returns a value, that value must be assigned to a variable, or discarded by assigning to _.
fn hello() -> str {
return "Hello, world!"
}
str hello = hello() // assigned to `hello`
str _ = hello() // discarded
hello() // error: return value of function not used