#string #no-std #const #add #fork #size #copied

no-std fixedstr-ext

A fork of fixedstr, which add more const functions to it

1 unstable release

new 0.5.8 Nov 30, 2024

#366 in Rust patterns

Download history 67/week @ 2024-11-25

67 downloads per month
Used in fixed-type-id

MIT license

220KB
4.5K SLoC

Fork Updates Forked from fixedstr, add const_create_from_str_slice to_ptr to fstr to be used inside const context.

Library for several alternative string types using const generics. Most types can be copied and stack-allocated. Certain types such as zstr<8> and str8 are smaller in size than a &str on typical systems.

IMPORTANT CHANGES SINCE Version 0.5.1

The no-alloc build option has been added. In addition to no_std, this feature will disable compilation of any features that require the alloc crate, in particular alloc::string::String.

IMPORTANT CHANGES SINCE Version 0.5.0

The default availability of some features have changed. The crate is now #![no_std] by default. The std option, which enables the fstr type, is no longer enabled by default. The Flexstr and Sharedstr types are also no longer enabled by default. However, unless you require one of these three types, your build configuration should most likely work as before. If you already use default-features=false, your configuration should also work as before. See the documentation for details and examples of how to configure your build.

Recent enhancements also include const constructors and other const functions.

Examples

  let a:str8 = str8::from("abcdef"); //a str8 can hold up to 7 bytes
  let a2 = a;  // copied, not moved
  let ab = a.substr(1,5);  // copies substring to new string
  assert_eq!(ab, "bcde");  // compare for equality with &str, derefs to &str
  assert!(a<ab); // and Ord, Hash, Debug, Eq, other common traits
  let astr:&str = a.to_str(); // convert to &str (zero copy)
  let aowned:String = a.to_string(); // convert to owned string
  let afstr:fstr<8> = fstr::from(a); // fstr is another fixedstr crate type
  let azstr:zstr<16> = zstr::from(a); // so is zstr
  let a32:str32 = a.resize(); // same kind of string but with 31-byte capacity  
  let mut u = str8::from("aλb"); //unicode support
  assert_eq!(u.nth(1), Some('λ'));  // get nth character
  assert_eq!(u.nth_ascii(3), 'b');  // get nth byte as ascii character
  assert!(u.set(1,'μ'));  // changes a character of the same character class
  assert!(!u.set(1,'c')); // .set returns false on failure
  assert!(u.set(2,'c'));
  assert_eq!(u, "aμc");
  assert_eq!(u.len(),4);  // length in bytes
  assert_eq!(u.charlen(),3);  // length in chars
  let mut ac:str16 = a.reallocate().unwrap(); //copies to larger capacity type
  let remainder = ac.push("ghijklmnopq"); //append up to capacity, returns remainder
  assert_eq!(ac.len(),15);
  assert_eq!(remainder, "pq");
  ac.truncate(9);  // keep first 9 chars
  assert_eq!(&ac,"abcdefghi");
  let (upper,lower) = (str8::make("ABC"), str8::make("abc"));
  assert_eq!(upper, lower.to_ascii_upper()); // no owned String needed

  let c1 = str8::from("abcd"); // string concatenation with + for strN types  
  let c2 = str8::from("xyz");
  let mut c3 = c1 + c2 + "123";           
  assert_eq!(c3,"abcdxyz123");
  assert_eq!(c3.capacity(),15);  // type of c3 is resized to str16
  c3 = "00" + c3;                // concat &str left or right
  assert_eq!(c3,"00abcdxyz123");

  let c4 = str_format!(str16,"abc {}{}{}",1,2,3); // impls core::fmt::Write
  assert_eq!(c4,"abc 123");  //str_format! truncates if capacity exceeded
  let c5 = try_format!(str8,"abcdef{}","ghijklmn");
  assert!(c5.is_none());  // try_format! returns None if capacity exceeded

  const C:str8 = str8::const_make("abcd");    // const constructor
  let xarray = [0u8;C.len()];                 // const length function

Consult the documentation for details.

Dependencies