but I can't work out how to tell the borrow checker to increase the lifetime.
It's impossible.
The lifetime of a value, in C, C++ or Rust, is defined either:
- by its lexical scope, if it is bound to an automatic variable
- by its dynamic scope, if it is allocated on the heap
You can create variables which reference this value, and if your reference lives longer than the value, then you have a dangling reference:
- in C and C++, you better do nothing with it
- in Rust, the compiler will refuse to compile your code
In order to validate your program, the Rust compiler will require that you annotate the lifetime of your references; you will use lifetime annotations such as 'a
in &'a T
which allow naming a lifetime in order to document the relationship between the lifetime of multiple values.
The operative word is document here: a lifetime is intangible and cannot be influenced, the lifetime annotation 'a
is just a name to allow referring to it.
So?
Whenever you find yourself wanting to extend the lifetime of a reference, what you should be looking at instead is extending the lifetime of the referred... or simply not use a reference but a value instead.
In this case, a simple solution is to return String
instead of &str
:
fn build_collection_set(reader: &mut BufReader<File>) -> HashSet<String> {
let mut collection_set = HashSet::new();
for line in reader.lines() {
let line = line.unwrap();
if line.len() > 0 {
collection_set.insert(line);
}
}
collection_set
}
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