Crates.io | shrinkwraprs |
lib.rs | shrinkwraprs |
version | 0.3.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2018-02-04 08:50:19.347165 |
updated_at | 2019-12-12 02:00:05.02042 |
description | Auto-derive for Rust conversion traits -- make working with newtypes a breeze |
homepage | |
repository | https://gitlab.com/williamyaoh/shrinkwraprs |
max_upload_size | |
id | 49553 |
size | 43,220 |
Making wrapper types allows us to give more compile-time guarantees about our code being correct:
// Now we can't mix up widths and heights; the compiler will yell at us!
struct Width(u64);
struct Height(u64);
But... they're kind of a pain to work with. If you ever need to get at
that wrapped u64
, you need to constantly pattern-match back and forth
to wrap and unwrap the values.
shrinkwraprs
aims to alleviate this pain by allowing you to derive
implementations of various conversion traits by deriving
Shrinkwrap
.
Currently, using #[derive(Shrinkwrap)]
will derive the following traits
for all structs:
AsRef<InnerType>
Borrow<InnerType>
Deref<Target=InnerType>
Additionally, using #[shrinkwrap(mutable)]
will also
derive the following traits:
AsMut<InnerType>
BorrowMut<InnerType>
DerefMut<Target=InnerType>
Finally, one more option is #[shrinkwrap(transformers)]
, which will derive
some useful inherent functions for transforming the wrapped data:
fn transform<F>(&mut self, mut f: F) -> &mut Self where F: FnMut(&mut InnerType)
fn siphon<F, T>(self, mut f: F) -> T where F: FnMut(InnerType) -> T
...where transform
makes it easy to chain updates on the inner value, and
siphon
allows you to easily move out the inner value to produce a value
of a different type.
transform
will have the same visibility as the inner field, which ensures that
transform
doesn't leak the possibility of changing the inner value
(potentially in invariant-violating ways). siphon
has the same visibility as
the struct itself, since it doesn't provide a direct way for callers to break
your data.
First, add shrinkwraprs
as a dependency in your Cargo.toml
:
[dependencies]
shrinkwraprs = "0.3.0"
Then, just slap a #[derive(Shrinkwrap)]
on any structs you want
convenient-ified:
#[macro_use] extern crate shrinkwraprs;
#[derive(Shrinkwrap)]
struct Email(String);
fn main() {
let email = Email("chiya+snacks@natsumeya.jp".into());
let is_discriminated_email =
email.contains("+"); // Woohoo, we can use the email like a string!
/* ... */
}
If you have multiple fields, but there's only one field you want to be able
to deref/borrow as, mark it with #[shrinkwrap(main_field)]
:
#[derive(Shrinkwrap)]
struct Email {
spamminess: f64,
#[shrinkwrap(main_field)] addr: String
}
#[derive(Shrinkwrap)]
struct CodeSpan(u32, u32, #[shrinkwrap(main_field)] Token);
If you also want to be able to modify the wrapped value directly,
add the attribute #[shrinkwrap(mutable)]
as well:
#[derive(Shrinkwrap)]
#[shrinkwrap(mutable)]
struct InputBuffer {
buffer: String
}
...
let mut input_buffer = /* ... */;
input_buffer.push_str("some values");
...