3 releases
0.1.3 | Nov 29, 2019 |
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0.1.2 | Nov 14, 2019 |
0.1.0 | Nov 9, 2019 |
#18 in #array-string
Used in bystr
5KB
80 lines
bystr
bystr
is a Rust procedural-macro to turn a static string into an
array of bytes at compile time. This allows for easier FFI interaction
as well as stack-based "static" strings.
A null byte is appended to the given string when converted to an array.
example
Using the macro is fairly simple:
// import the crate
extern crate bystr;
use bystr::bystr;
fn main() {
// use it as a function call, get a null-terminated byte array
let as_bytes = bystr!("this will be a [24; u8]");
println!("{:?}", as_bytes);
// you may also define the length of the output array.
// this allows you to create fixed-length arrays larger than your string
// in order to match the length expected by receivers.
//
// an error will be thrown if len(str) >= len_arg.
let defined_length = bystr!(10, "hello");
assert_eq!(10, defined_length.len());
assert_eq!(defined_length, "hello\0\0\0\0\0".as_bytes()[..]);
// in addition to raw strings, you may also convert an identifier
// to a static string:
let ident_str = bystr!(defined_length);
assert_eq!(15, ident_str.len());
assert_eq!(ident_str, "defined_length\0".as_bytes()[..]);
}
Dependencies
~1.5MB
~35K SLoC