Crates.io | custom_error_core |
lib.rs | custom_error_core |
version | 1.9.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2021-04-06 07:45:37.297057 |
updated_at | 2021-04-07 21:36:04.945146 |
description | Define custom errors without boilerplate using the custom_error! macro. |
homepage | https://github.com/lovasoa/custom_error |
repository | https://github.com/lovasoa/custom_error |
max_upload_size | |
id | 379703 |
size | 41,380 |
This crate contains a macro that should make it easier to define custom errors without having to write a lot of boilerplate code.
The custom_error!
macro included in this crate takes a type name
and a list of possible errors and generates a rust enumeration for all the cases,
together with the required impl
blocks implementing std::error::Error
and std::fmt::Display
.
If you only have a single case for an error you can also generate a struct instead of an enum.
You can now write:
extern crate custom_error;
use custom_error::custom_error;
// Note the use of braces rather than parentheses.
custom_error!{MyError
Unknown{code:u8} = "unknown error with code {code}.",
Err41 = "Sit by a lake"
}
instead of
#[derive(Debug)]
enum MyError {
Unknown { code: u8 },
Err41,
}
impl std::error::Error for MyError {}
impl std::fmt::Display for MyError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut std::fmt::Formatter)
-> std::fmt::Result {
match self {
MyError::Unknown { code } => write!(f, "unknown error with code {}." , code),
MyError::Err41 => write!(f, "Sit by a lake")
}
}
}
If you only have a single error case you can also generate a struct:
extern crate custom_error;
use custom_error::custom_error;
custom_error!{MyError{code:u8} = "error with code {code}."}
To define a simple error, you only have to indicate three things:
extern crate custom_error;
use custom_error::custom_error;
custom_error!{MyError
Bad = "Something bad happened",
Terrible = "This is a very serious error!!!"
}
You can store data inside your errors. In order to do so, indicate the name and types of the fields to want to store in curly braces after an error type.
extern crate custom_error;
use custom_error::custom_error;
custom_error!{SantaError
BadChild{name:String, foolishness:u8} = "{name} has been bad {foolishness} times this year",
TooFar = "The location you indicated is too far from the north pole",
InvalidReindeer{legs:u8} = "The reindeer has {legs} legs"
}
assert_eq!(
"Thomas has been bad 108 times this year",
SantaError::BadChild{name: "Thomas".into(), foolishness: 108}.to_string());
The error messages can reference your parameters using braces ({parameter_name}
).
If you need some custom logic to display your parameters, you can use
advanced custom error messages.
If the cause of your error is another lower-level error, you can indicate that
by adding a special source
field to one of your error cases.
Thus, you can make your custom error wrap other error types, and the conversion from these foreign error types will be implemented automatically.
#[macro_use] extern crate custom_error;
use std::{io, io::Read, fs::File, result::Result, num::ParseIntError};
custom_error! {FileParseError
Io{source: io::Error} = "unable to read from the file",
Format{source: ParseIntError} = "the file does not contain a valid integer",
TooLarge{value:u8} = "the number in the file ({value}) is too large"
}
fn parse_hex_file(filename: &str) -> Result<u8, FileParseError> {
let mut contents = String::new();
// The '?' notation can convert from generic errors to our custom error type
File::open(filename)?.read_to_string(&mut contents)?;
let value = u8::from_str_radix(&contents, 16)?;
if value > 42 {
Err(FileParseError::TooLarge { value })
} else {
Ok(value)
}
}
fn main() {
let parse_result = parse_hex_file("/i'm not a file/");
assert_eq!("unable to read from the file", parse_result.unwrap_err().to_string());
}
You can make an error type public by adding the pub
keyword
at the beginning of the declaration.
custom_error!{pub MyError A="error a", B="error b"}
You can derive traits for your error types by adding attributes to the beginning of your macro invocation.
custom_error!{#[derive(PartialEq,PartialOrd)] MyError A="error a", B="error b"}
assert!(MyError::A < MyError::B);
Since doc comments
are just syntax sugar for #[doc = "..."]
, you can use them too:
custom_error!{
/// This is the documentation for my error type
pub MyError A="error a", B="error b"
}
If you want to use error messages that you cannot express with simple formatting strings, you can generate your error messages with custom code.
In the following example, we use this feature to display a different error message based on the cause of the underlying IO error.
custom_error!{ pub MyError
Io{source: Error} = @{
match source.kind() {
NotFound => "The file does not exist",
TimedOut => "The operation timed out",
_ => "unknown error",
}
},
Unknown = "unknown error"
}