Crates.io | unquote |
lib.rs | unquote |
version | 0.0.7 |
source | src |
created_at | 2020-11-07 19:04:43.165738 |
updated_at | 2023-08-26 11:06:47.273284 |
description | A reverse quote macro... that is: A macro to parse input from a ParseStream according to a given pattern. |
homepage | https://github.com/Tamschi/unquote/tree/v0.0.7 |
repository | https://github.com/Tamschi/unquote |
max_upload_size | |
id | 309712 |
size | 38,435 |
A reverse quote macro... that is: A macro to parse input from a ParseStream
according to a given pattern.
Note: This library is a work in progress. While I don't expect large breaking changes to the syntax, there are missing features and error messages aren't always great yet.
This macro currently requires
syn
to be available in the current namespace with at least the"extra-traits"
and"parsing"
features enabled. This should get fixed with the next larger refactor.
Please use cargo-edit to always add the latest version of this library:
cargo add unquote
use call2_for_syn::call2_strict;
use quote::quote;
use std::error::Error;
use syn::{LitStr, parse::ParseStream};
use unquote::unquote;
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> {
// Sample input
let tokens = quote!(<!-- "Hello!" -->);
// Analogous to a parser implementation with `syn`:
fn parser_function(input: ParseStream) -> syn::Result<LitStr> {
// Declare bindings ahead of time.
// Rust can usually infer the type.
let parsed;
// This uses the ? operator internally -
// It needs to be inside a `Result`-returning function.
unquote!(input, <!-- #parsed -->);
Ok(parsed)
}
let parsed = call2_strict(tokens, parser_function)??;
assert_eq!(parsed.value(), "Hello!");
Ok(())
}
(roughly in order of priority)
Tokens | |
---|---|
Punct | 🗸³ |
Ident | ✔ |
Literal | ✔ |
Bindings | |
---|---|
#binding |
✔ |
#let binding |
✔ |
#do parser_function => binding |
✔ |
#do let parser_function => binding |
✔ |
## -escapes |
✔ |
Groups | |
---|---|
() |
|
{} |
|
[] |
Variadics¹ | |
---|---|
#(#binding)? |
|
#(#binding)* |
|
#(#binding),* |
|
#(#binding)+ ² |
|
#(#binding),+ ² |
Span Captures | |
---|---|
#'span ⁴ |
✔ |
#^'span ⁴ |
|
#$'span ⁴ |
Positional Bindings...?⁵ | |
---|---|
#0 |
Utility Macros | |
---|---|
Unquotable -derive⁶ |
Helpers | |
---|---|
Keyword |
|
AnyIdent |
¹ Note that all variadics are eager beyond the first TokenTree
and only do very shallow speculative parsing! In practice, this means that for example parsing ++
as #(+-)?++
will fail, as the first +
"locks in" the optional phrase.
² Not specifically present in quote
, but required variadics are great.
³ Currently without distinction regarding combinations like =>
vs. = >
and such. This will change eventually, along with a breaking semver change.
⁴ Denoting Span
s as lifetimes is a bit unusual, but nicely highlights them with a different colour.
⁵ This would come in handy when using the macro for example in if let
conditions (since the positional bindings would be returned only by value in the macro expression's result), and wouldn't interfere with named bindings. It's definitely more of a bonus feature though, in case it can indeed be added cleanly.
⁶ This should work on struct
s and implement syn::Parse
and a custom trait that checks the first token.
Licensed under either of
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.
unquote
strictly follows Semantic Versioning 2.0.0 with the following exceptions:
This includes the Rust version requirement specified above.
Earlier Rust versions may be compatible, but this can change with minor or patch releases.
Which versions are affected by features and patches can be determined from the respective headings in CHANGELOG.md.