Crates.io | numX |
lib.rs | numX |
version | 0.2.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-02-28 22:19:50.341529 |
updated_at | 2020-02-28 22:19:50.341529 |
description | Implement the following non standard integers: u1, u2, u3, u4, u5, u6, u7, u9, u10, u11, u12, u13, u14, u15, u17, u18, u19, u20, u21, u22, u23, u24, u25, u26, u27, u28, u29, u30, u31, u33, u34, u35, u36, u37, u38, u39, u40, u41, u42, u43, u44, u45, u46, u47, u48, u49, u50, u51, u52, u53, u54, u55, u56, u57, u58, u59, u60, u61, u62, u63, u65, u66, u67, u68, u69, u70, u71, u72, u73, u74, u75, u76, u77, u78, u79, u80, u81, u82, u83, u84, u85, u86, u87, u88, u89, u90, u91, u92, u93, u94, u95, u96, u97, u98, u99, u100, u101, u102, u103, u104, u105, u106, u107, u108, u109, u110, u111, u112, u113, u114, u115, u116, u117, u118, u119, u120, u121, u122, u123, u124, u125, u126, u127, i1, i2, i3, i4, i5, i6, i7, i9, i10, i11, i12, i13, i14, i15, i17, i18, i19, i20, i21, i22, i23, i24, i25, i26, i27, i28, i29, i30, i31, i33, i34, i35, i36, i37, i38, i39, i40, i41, i42, i43, i44, i45, i46, i47, i48, i49, i50, i51, i52, i53, i54, i55, i56, i57, i58, i59, i60, i61, i62, i63, i65, i66, i67, i68, i69, i70, i71, i72, i73, i74, i75, i76, i77, i78, i79, i80, i81, i82, i83, i84, i85, i86, i87, i88, i89, i90, i91, i92, i93, i94, i95, i96, i97, i98, i99, i100, i101, i102, i103, i104, i105, i106, i107, i108, i109, i110, i111, i112, i113, i114, i115, i116, i117, i118, i119, i120, i121, i122, i123, i124, i125, i126, i127 |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/AnyTimeTraveler/numX.git |
max_upload_size | |
id | 213658 |
size | 98,497 |
Non standard integer types like
u122
,u9
,i67
,u10
,u63
,i7
,i9
etc
struct Packet {
header: u3,
timestamp: u5,
hash: u4,
mode: u2,
}
I have merely merged the pull requests on this fork and added features what would otherwise have been my pull request to him.
I am still a rust beginner. Examine this yourself before deciding to use it!
When non-standard-width integers is required in an application, the norm is to use a larger container and make sure the value is within range after manipulation. numX aims to take care of this once and for all by:
u1
-u127
and i1
-i127
types that should behave as similar as possible to the built in rust types
From
.TryFrom
.serde
by serializing into the next bigger container.isize
and usize
for the target architecture.num-traits
.Thank to all the contributors from the original project and to the people who sent the pull requests that I merged:
Licensed under either of
Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.