59. split_first_chunk — Destructure Slices into Arrays
Parsing a header from a byte buffer? Extracting the first N elements of a slice? split_first_chunk hands you a fixed-size array and the remainder in one call — no manual indexing, no panics.
The Problem
You have a byte slice and need to pull out a fixed-size prefix — say a 4-byte magic number or a 2-byte length field. The manual approach is fragile:
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That try_into().unwrap() is ugly, and if you get the index arithmetic wrong, you get a panic at runtime.
After: split_first_chunk
Stabilized in Rust 1.77, split_first_chunk splits a slice into a &[T; N] array reference and the remaining slice — returning None if the slice is too short:
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One method call. No manual slicing, no try_into, and the const generic N ensures the compiler knows the exact array size.
Chaining Chunks for Protocol Parsing
Real protocols have multiple fields. Chain split_first_chunk calls to peel them off one at a time:
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Each ? short-circuits if the remaining data is too short. No bounds checks scattered across your code.
From the Other End: split_last_chunk
Need to grab a suffix instead — like a trailing checksum? split_last_chunk mirrors the API from the back:
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Same safety, same ergonomics — just peeling from the tail.
The Full Family
These methods come in mutable variants too, all stabilized in 1.77:
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Wherever you reach for &data[..N] and a try_into(), there’s probably a chunk method that does it better. Type-safe, bounds-checked, and zero-cost.