# spanned_error_message A library for formatting error messages with spans This library is intended to be used outside of proc macros. ## Examples From a file in a string ```rust use spanned_error_message::{SpannedErrorMessage, Section}; // A demo file loaded from a string let file = r#" pub fn foo(bar: u32) -> u32 { return String::from(bar * 2) } "#; // Section is equivalent to a Span in proc_macro. let section = Section::from_search("String::from", file).unwrap(); // Create the message let message = SpannedErrorMessage::new() .create(§ion); eprintln!("{}", message); // | // 3 | return String::from(bar * 2) // | ^^^^^^^^^^^^ ``` You can also convert a [proc_macro2::Span] into a section. Also you can load the content from a file. ```rust use spanned_error_message::{SpannedErrorMessage, Section}; // Replace this with your own span let span = proc_macro2::Span::call_site(); // Point the span to a file let section = Section::from_span_and_path(&span, "src/lib.rs").unwrap(); // Create a message let message = SpannedErrorMessage::new() .create(§ion); ``` With a label, title and reference to a file ```rust use spanned_error_message::{SpannedErrorMessage, Section}; // A demo file loaded from a string let file = r#" pub fn foo(bar: u32) -> u32 { return String::from(bar * 2) } "#; // Section is equivalent to a Span in proc_macro. let mut section = Section::from_search("String::from", file).unwrap() .label("the problem is here"); // Set the file path. This happens automatically if you load from a file instead of a string. section.document.path = Some("src/lib.rs".into()); let message = SpannedErrorMessage::new() .title("your code is broken") .create(§ion); eprintln!("{}", message); // error: your code is broken // --> src/lib.rs:3:11 // | // 3 | return String::from(bar * 2) // | ^^^^^^^^^^^^ your code is broken ``` Currently there is only support for single line pointers. If you have a multiline span, it will only point to the first line.