| Crates.io | roopert |
| lib.rs | roopert |
| version | 0.2.0 |
| created_at | 2021-12-03 00:21:39.18716+00 |
| updated_at | 2021-12-03 22:33:07.287028+00 |
| description | Another object-oriented toolkit for Rust |
| homepage | https://github.com/NGnius/roopert-rs |
| repository | https://github.com/NGnius/roopert-rs |
| max_upload_size | |
| id | 491481 |
| size | 17,125 |
Roopert is an open-source toolkit for object-oriented programming patterns. Spend less time writing boilerplate and more time implementing functionality!
| parent | extends | accessors | get | set |
|---|
A field-level attribute for indicating which field is the parent of the struct in conjunction with the extends attribute macro.
This attribute macro takes no other parameters.
The standard form #[roopert(parent)] as well as a shortened form #[parent] macros may be used.
The extends attribute will automatically resolve types to fields, but the parent attribute overrides the default behaviour.
A struct-level attribute for making a named struct "extend" functionality of another Rust type.
Rust types are supplied as parameters to indicate which type(s) the struct extends.
A field with the same type must also be in the struct.
The standard form #[roopert(extends)] attribute macro is used, and the #[roopert(parent)] attribute can be used on a field to explicitly declare the parent.
Extends or inheritance-like behaviour is accomplished by an automatic implementation of AsRef, AsMut, Into, Deref and DerefMut for the struct this attribute is applied to.
This creates smart-pointer behaviour along with the ability to explicitly downcast.
#[roopert(extends, String)]
struct MyStruct {
not_parent_field: String, // ignored
#[roopert(parent)]
parent_field: String,
another_field: String, // also ignored
}
// automatically generated AsRef implementation by Roopert
// (not shown: AsMut, Into, Deref, and DerefMut implementations)
impl AsRef<String> for MyStruct {
fn as_ref(&self) -> &String {
&self.parent_field
}
}
A struct-level attribute for automatically creating getters and setters for fields of a named struct.
Optionally, this attribute accepts one or two parameters (in any order): get = rule and set = rule,
where rule can be one of All (generate all accessors), Private (generate accessors for all private fields), No (don't generate -- default).
Additionally, the get and set attribute types can be used to override the struct-level getter and setter rule, respectively.
#[roopert(accessors, get = All)]
struct MyStruct {
#[roopert(set)]
my_field: String
}
// automatically generated by Roopert
impl MyStruct {
// generated from get rule in struct attribute
pub fn get_my_field(&self) -> &String {
&self.my_field
}
// generated from field attribute
pub fn set_my_field(&mut self, x: String) {
self.my_field = x;
}
}
A field-level attribute for overriding accessors attribute behaviour for getters methods.
Optionally, pre = operation can be supplied to do an operation before the get function returns.
The optional parameter mutable = true can be supplied to get a mutable reference (as well as allow mutable self operations with the pre parameter).
The standard form #[roopert(get)] or the shortened #[get] attribute macro may be used.
Note: this doesn't work without #[roopert(accessors)] on the struct.
#[roopert(accessors)]
struct MyStruct {
#[roopert(get, mutable = true, pre = self.before_get_my_field() )]
my_field: String,
my_field_is_borrowed: bool
}
impl MyStruct {
fn before_get_my_field(&mut self) { // note that this function uses `&mut self` because mutable = true
self.my_field_is_borrowed = true;
}
}
// automatically generated by Roopert
impl MyStruct {
// generated from get rule in field attribute
pub fn get_my_field(&mut self) -> &mut String {
self.before_get_my_field(); // from `pre = self.pre_get_my_field()`
&mut self.my_field
}
}
A field-level attribute for overriding accessors attribute behaviour for setter methods.
Optionally, pre = operation and post = operation can be used to do an operation before and after the variable is set, respectively.
The standard form #[roopert(set)] or shortened the #[set] attribute macro may be used.
Note: this doesn't work without #[roopert(accessors)] on the struct.
#[roopert(accessors)]
struct MyStruct {
#[roopert(set, pre = self.before_set_my_field(), post = self.after_set_my_field())]
my_field: String,
setting_my_field: bool, // this will briefly be true (but unobservable unless you break Rust safety)
}
impl MyStruct {
fn before_set_my_field(&mut self) { // these can always use &mut self, unlike getters
self.setting_my_field = true;
}
fn after_set_my_field(&mut self) {
self.setting_my_field = false;
}
}
// automatically generated by Roopert
impl MyStruct {
// generated from field attribute
pub fn set_my_field(&mut self, x: String) {
self.my_field = x;
}
}
License: MIT