Crates.io | if_rust_version |
lib.rs | if_rust_version |
version | 1.0.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2019-09-01 10:58:00.892056 |
updated_at | 2019-09-06 07:48:07.430977 |
description | Macro to enable or disable code depending on the rust version |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/ogoffart/if_rust_version |
max_upload_size | |
id | 161326 |
size | 31,349 |
This is a small crate that just export one macro that allow you to have code
conditionally of the rust version.
The if_rust_version!
macro allows you to still
support older version
of rustc while still using conditionally new features of the compiler
The release of rust 1.36 stabilized the MaybeUninit
union as a replacement
for the to be deprecated mem::uninitialized
. One might want to use
MaybeUninit when the compiler supports it, but not without requiring a recent compiler.
The if_rust_version!
macro is exactly what one needs:
if_rust_version! { >= 1.36 {
let mut x = std::mem::MaybeUninit::<u32>::uninit();
unsafe { x.as_mut_ptr().write(32); }
let xx = unsafe { x.assume_init() };
} else {
let mut xx : u32 = unsafe { mem::uninitialized() };
unsafe { ptr::write(&mut xx as *mut u32, 32); }
}}
The macro can be used to declare items or expression.
It can also be usefull to declare macro for pattern you often use. For example, if we want to declare functions const from rust 1.31 which introduced the concept:
if_rust_version! { >= 1.31 {
// just a identity macro that forward the item
macro_rules! const_fn { ($f:item) => { $f } }
} else {
// remove the 'const'
macro_rules! const_fn {
($(#[$m:meta])* const fn $($rest:tt)*) => { $(#[$m])* fn $($rest)* };
($(#[$m:meta])* pub const fn $($rest:tt)*) => {
$(#[$m])*
/// This function is a const fn from rust 1.31
pub fn $($rest)*
};
}
}}
const_fn!{
/// This function is const chen the compiler supports it
pub const fn hello(x : u32) -> u32 { x + 2 }
}
The minimum rust version is rust 1.12, because previous versions were
not expanding tt
correcrtly in macro_rules!
This crate has no dependencies, and is #![no-std]
.
There are other crates that check the rust version number:
The main difference with
version_check and
rustc_version is that these crates
are meant to to be used by first writing a build.rs
script to then add some
feature flag.
rustversion is a attribute macro,
this has the disadvantage not to be able to be used for feature which add
new grammar to the language (example: ?
or 10u128
or impl Trait
).
Also attribute macros were only stabilized recently, and do not support
expanding to expressions yet. Not to mention the need to use heavy dependencies
such as syn
to develop procedural macro.
There is also a proposed RFC 2523
which suggest allowing to query the rust version via the #[cfg(...)]
attributes.
MIT/Apache-2.0