enum-tag-macro

Crates.ioenum-tag-macro
lib.rsenum-tag-macro
version0.3.0
sourcesrc
created_at2023-03-23 21:59:26.45602
updated_at2023-03-28 14:43:04.929508
descriptionProc. macro implementation for the `enum-tag` crate.
homepage
repositoryhttps://github.com/robbepop/enum-tag
max_upload_size
id818820
size10,976
Robin Freyler (Robbepop)

documentation

https://docs.rs/enum-tag-macro/

README

Continuous Integration Documentation Crates.io
ci docs crates

#[derive(EnumTag)]

This crate provides a proc. macro to derive the EnumTag trait for the given Rust enum. The #derive(EnumTag) proc. macro only works on Rust enum types and generates both

  • a C-like enum type with the same variants as the input Rust enum but without all the associated data.
  • a derived implementation of the EnumTag trait for the Rust enum

The derived EnumTag trait makes it possible to create instances of the generated C-like enum type as well as link to its definition via <RustEnum as EnumTag>::Tag.

When is this useful?

This is mostly useful for crates that profit from having a distinct enum tag type while at the same time hosting Rust enum types with lots of variants which would make it burdensome to maintain the mirroring between both enum type and enum tag type.

The motivation for this crate was a Wasm interpreter that represents its instructions as an enum but also wants to access the opcodes of the instructions without their data. In this example the opcodes are the instruction enum tag.

Example

use ::enum_tag::EnumTag;

#[derive(EnumTag)]
#[repr(u8)] // Rust needs this for `B = 42`
enum Foo {
    A,
    B = 42,
    C(i32),
    D(i32, i64),
    E { a: i32 },
    F { a: i32, b: i64 },
}

/// This is how we can access the generated C-like enum type and name it.
type FooTag = <Foo as EnumTag>::Tag;

assert_eq!(FooTag::A, Foo::A.tag());
assert_eq!(FooTag::B, Foo::B.tag());
assert_eq!(FooTag::C, Foo::C(1).tag());
assert_eq!(FooTag::D, Foo::D(2, 3).tag());
assert_eq!(FooTag::E, Foo::E { a: 4 }.tag());
assert_eq!(FooTag::F, Foo::F { a: 5, b: 6 }.tag());

assert_eq!(FooTag::B as u8, 42);

The above #[derive(EnumTag)] generates the following Rust code:

const _: () = {
    #[derive(
        ::core::fmt::Debug,
        ::core::clone::Clone,
        ::core::marker::Copy,
        ::core::cmp::PartialEq,
        ::core::cmp::Eq,
        ::core::cmp::PartialOrd,
        ::core::cmp::Ord,
        ::core::hash::Hash,
    )]
    pub enum FooTag {
        A,
        B = 42,
        C,
        D,
        E,
        F,
    }

    impl ::enum_tag::EnumTag for Foo {
        type Tag = FooTag;

        fn tag(&self) -> <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag {
            match self {
                Self::A { .. } => <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag::A,
                Self::B { .. } => <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag::B,
                Self::C { .. } => <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag::C,
                Self::D { .. } => <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag::D,
                Self::E { .. } => <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag::E,
                Self::F { .. } => <Self as ::enum_tag::EnumTag>::Tag::F,
            }
        }
    }
};
Commit count: 28

cargo fmt