Crates.io | dbg-pls-derive |
lib.rs | dbg-pls-derive |
version | 0.4.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2022-04-16 12:53:31.394295 |
updated_at | 2023-05-13 18:22:47.440492 |
description | derive(Debug) |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/conradludgate/dbg-pls |
max_upload_size | |
id | 568956 |
size | 15,190 |
A Debug
-like trait for rust that outputs properly formatted code
Take the following code:
let code = r#"
[
"Hello, World! I am a long string",
420,
"Wait, you can't mix and match types in arrays, is this python?",
69,
"Nice."
]
"#;
let expr: syn::Expr = syn::parse_str(code).unwrap();
println!("{expr:?}");
This outputs
Array(ExprArray { attrs: [], bracket_token: Bracket, elems: [Lit(ExprLit { attrs: [], lit: Str(LitStr { token: "Hello, World! I am a long string" }) }), Comma, Lit(ExprLit { attrs: [], lit: Int(LitInt { token: 420 }) }), Comma, Lit(ExprLit { attrs: [], lit: Str(LitStr { token: "Wait, you can't mix and match types in arrays, is this python?" }) }), Comma, Lit(ExprLit { attrs: [], lit: Int(LitInt { token: 69 }) }), Comma, Lit(ExprLit { attrs: [], lit: Str(LitStr { token: "Nice." }) })] })
which is far too dense to read.
If we change the println to use the alternate printing (:#?
), then we get
Array(
ExprArray {
attrs: [],
bracket_token: Bracket,
elems: [
Lit(
ExprLit {
attrs: [],
lit: Str(
LitStr {
token: "Hello, World! I am a long string",
},
),
},
),
Comma,
Lit(
ExprLit {
attrs: [],
lit: Int(
LitInt {
token: 420,
},
),
},
),
Comma,
Lit(
ExprLit {
attrs: [],
lit: Str(
LitStr {
token: "Wait, you can't mix and match types in arrays, is this python?",
},
),
},
),
Comma,
Lit(
ExprLit {
attrs: [],
lit: Int(
LitInt {
token: 69,
},
),
},
),
Comma,
Lit(
ExprLit {
attrs: [],
lit: Str(
LitStr {
token: "Nice.",
},
),
},
),
],
},
)
which is far too spread out to be natural.
This is where dbg_pls
comes in. Replace the println with
println!("{}", dbg_pls::color(&expr));
And you get
cargo add dbg-pls
Add to your types
#[derive(dbg_pls::DebugPls)]
cargo add dbg-pls +pretty
And print using pretty
, eg
println!("{}", dbg_pls::pretty(&value));
derive
- enables the #[derive(DebugPls)]
derivepretty
- enables the pretty
function for pretty printingcolors
- enables the color
function for syntax highlighted printinguse dbg_pls::{pretty, DebugPls};
#[derive(DebugPls, Copy, Clone)]
pub struct Demo {
foo: i32,
bar: &'static str,
}
let mut val = [Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" }; 10];
val[6].bar = "Hello, world! I am a very long string";
println!("{}", pretty(&val));
Outputs
[
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo {
foo: 5,
bar: "Hello, world! I am a very long string",
},
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" },
]
use dbg_pls::{color, DebugPls};
#[derive(DebugPls, Copy, Clone)]
pub struct Demo {
foo: i32,
bar: &'static str,
}
let mut val = [Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" }; 10];
val[6].bar = "Hello, world! I am a very long string";
println!("{}", color(&val));
Outputs:
use dbg_pls::{color, DebugPls};
#[derive(DebugPls, Copy, Clone)]
pub struct Demo {
foo: i32,
bar: &'static str,
}
let foo = 5;
let bar = "Hello, World! This is the color macro";
let _ = color!(Demo { foo, bar });
Outputs:
use dbg_pls::{pretty, DebugPls};
#[derive(DebugPls, Copy, Clone)]
pub struct Demo {
foo: i32,
bar: &'static str,
}
let foo = 5;
let bar = "hello";
let _ = pretty!(Demo { foo, bar });
Outputs:
[src/lib.rs:558] Demo { foo, bar } => Demo { foo: 5, bar: "hello" }