The Sway Standard Library is the foundation of portable Sway software, a set of minimal shared abstractions for the broader Sway ecosystem. It offers core types, library-defined operations on language primitives, native asset management, blockchain contextual operations, access control, storage management, and support for types from other VMs, among many other things. Reference the standard library docs here .
Result<T, E>
Type Result
is the type used for returning and propagating errors. It is an enum
with two variants: Ok(T)
, representing success and containing a value, and Err(E)
, representing error and containing an error value. The T
and E
in this definition are type parameters, allowing Result
to be generic and to be used with any types.
/// `Result` is a type that represents either success (`Ok`) or failure (`Err`).
pub enum Result<T, E> {
/// Contains the success value.
Ok: T,
/// Contains the error value.
Err: E,
}
Functions return Result
whenever errors are expected and recoverable.
Take the following example:
script;
enum MyContractError {
DivisionByZero: (),
}
fn divide(numerator: u64, denominator: u64) -> Result<u64, MyContractError> {
if (denominator == 0) {
return Err(MyContractError::DivisionByZero);
} else {
Ok(numerator / denominator)
}
}
fn main() -> Result<u64, str[4]> {
let result = divide(20, 2);
match result {
Ok(value) => Ok(value),
Err(MyContractError::DivisionByZero) => Err("Fail"),
}
}
Option<T>
Type Option
represents an optional value: every Option
is either Some
and contains a value, or None
, and does not. Option
types are very common in Sway code, as they have a number of uses:
None
can be used as an initializer. None
is returned on error. The implementation of Option
matches on the variant: if it's Ok
it returns the inner value, if it's None
, it reverts .
/// A type that represents an optional value, either `Some(val)` or `None`.
pub enum Option<T> {
/// No value.
None: (),
/// Some value of type `T`.
Some: T,
}
Option
is commonly paired with pattern matching to query the presence of a value and take action, allowing developers to choose how to handle the None
case.
Below is an example that uses pattern matching to handle invalid divisions by 0 by returning an Option
:
script;
fn divide(numerator: u64, denominator: u64) -> Option<u64> {
if denominator == 0 {
None
} else {
Some(numerator / denominator)
}
}
fn main() {
let result = divide(6, 2);
// Pattern match to retrieve the value
match result {
// The division was valid
Some(x) => std::logging::log(x),
// The division was invalid
None => std::logging::log("Cannot divide by 0"),
}
}
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