a better solution would be to add a method called something like ulock that does a combined lock and unwrap.
That’s exactly what’s done above using an extension trait! You can mutex_val.ulock() with it!
Now that I think about it, I don’t like how unwrap can signal either “I know this can’t fail”, “the possible error states are too rare to care about” or “I can’t be bothered with real error handing right now”.
That’s why you’re told (clippy does that i think) to use expect instead, so you can signal “whatever string” you want to signal precisely.
Exactly! My code has a handful of “expect()” calls in it, and each one self-documents why it’s okay. It’s like a comment, but it appears in logs if it ever triggers.
That’s exactly what’s done above using an extension trait! You can
mutex_val.ulock()
with it!That’s why you’re told (clippy does that i think) to use
expect
instead, so you can signal “whatever string” you want to signal precisely.Exactly! My code has a handful of “expect()” calls in it, and each one self-documents why it’s okay. It’s like a comment, but it appears in logs if it ever triggers.