Crates.io | flagged |
lib.rs | flagged |
version | 0.1.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2024-03-18 05:17:50.233618 |
updated_at | 2024-03-18 05:17:50.233618 |
description | Bitflag-based warning type |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/ozaner/flagged |
max_upload_size | |
id | 1177171 |
size | 16,469 |
flagged
is a Rust library for creating Flagged
values, that is, values with an associated set of bitflags.
The main use case of the Flagged
struct is to be able to return values from a function along with associated warnings. There already exist crates that accomplish this like warned
and wresult
, but these crates instead represent their warnings as a Vec
. This means that every call of a function that returns one of these warning types, must also potentially allocate a Vec
. For many use cases, this seems like overkill. This was the inciting reason for the creation of this crate.
The flagged
crate depends on the enumflag2
crate, and so both must be included in your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
flagged = "0.1.0"
enumflags2 = "0.7.9"
Note that as long as this issue is still open, flagged
cannot simply reexport the enumflags2
crate.
Also note that, since enumflags2
still has a major version of 0, every version change is potentially breaking. As such, using the specific version above is recommended.
To create a flagged value, we first need to define a BitFlag
c-like enum to use it with:
#[bitflags]
#[repr(u8)] //bitflags must have an explicit repr
#[derive(Clone, Copy)] //bitflags must impl `Copy`
pub enum ParsingWarning {
TooLong,
TooShort,
InvalidToken,
}
With this defined, we can now define a function that returns a Flagged
value:
pub fn parse(str: &str) -> Flagged<MyStruct, ParsingWarning> {
//... rest of the fn
Flagged {
value: myStruct,
flags: myFlags,
}
}
We can then access the value, warnings, as well as perform other operations on the returned Flagged
value:
let f = parse(&"Hello, World");
//access wrapped value
println!("{}", f.value);
//access flags
if f.flags.contains(ParsingWarning::InvalidToken) {
println!("Invalid character found, ignoring!");
}
//turn into a result and error when any flags are set
assert!(f.flags.to_result().is_err());
//turn into a result and error only when certain flags are set
assert!(f.flags.to_result_against(ParsingWarning::TooShort | ParsingWarning::TooLong).is_err());
Note that the flags
field is of type BitFlags
from the enumflag2
crate, you can read more about it in the docs.