Crates.io | proc-macro2-next |
lib.rs | proc-macro2-next |
version | 1.0.0-rc4 |
source | src |
created_at | 2019-07-18 18:17:58.387294 |
updated_at | 2019-08-11 18:30:41.494554 |
description | A stable implementation of the upcoming new `proc_macro` API. Comes with an option, off by default, to also reimplement itself in terms of the upstream unstable API. |
homepage | https://github.com/alexcrichton/proc-macro2 |
repository | https://github.com/alexcrichton/proc-macro2 |
max_upload_size | |
id | 149920 |
size | 150,613 |
A wrapper around the procedural macro API of the compiler's proc_macro
crate.
This library serves three purposes:
Bring proc-macro-like functionality to other contexts like build.rs and
main.rs. Types from proc_macro
are entirely specific to procedural macros
and cannot ever exist in code outside of a procedural macro. Meanwhile
proc_macro2
types may exist anywhere including non-macro code. By developing
foundational libraries like syn and quote against proc_macro2
rather
than proc_macro
, the procedural macro ecosystem becomes easily applicable to
many other use cases and we avoid reimplementing non-macro equivalents of
those libraries.
Make procedural macros unit testable. As a consequence of being specific
to procedural macros, nothing that uses proc_macro
can be executed from a
unit test. In order for helper libraries or components of a macro to be
testable in isolation, they must be implemented using proc_macro2
.
Provide the latest and greatest APIs across all compiler versions. Procedural macros were first introduced to Rust in 1.15.0 with an extremely minimal interface. Since then, many improvements have landed to make macros more flexible and easier to write. This library tracks the procedural macro API of the most recent stable compiler but employs a polyfill to provide that API consistently across any compiler since 1.15.0.
[dependencies]
proc-macro2 = "0.4"
The skeleton of a typical procedural macro typically looks like this:
extern crate proc_macro;
#[proc_macro_derive(MyDerive)]
pub fn my_derive(input: proc_macro::TokenStream) -> proc_macro::TokenStream {
let input = proc_macro2::TokenStream::from(input);
let output: proc_macro2::TokenStream = {
/* transform input */
};
proc_macro::TokenStream::from(output)
}
If parsing with Syn, you'll use parse_macro_input!
instead to propagate
parse errors correctly back to the compiler when parsing fails.
The default feature set of proc-macro2 tracks the most recent stable compiler
API. Functionality in proc_macro
that is not yet stable is not exposed by
proc-macro2 by default.
To opt into the additional APIs available in the most recent nightly compiler,
the procmacro2_semver_exempt
config flag must be passed to rustc. As usual, we
will polyfill those nightly-only APIs all the way back to Rust 1.15.0. As these
are unstable APIs that track the nightly compiler, minor versions of proc-macro2
may make breaking changes to them at any time.
RUSTFLAGS='--cfg procmacro2_semver_exempt' cargo build
Note that this must not only be done for your crate, but for any crate that depends on your crate. This infectious nature is intentional, as it serves as a reminder that you are outside of the normal semver guarantees.
Semver exempt methods are marked as such in the proc-macro2 documentation.