This crate provides two types of bounded integer.
Macro-generated bounded integers
The bounded_integer!
macro allows you to define your own bounded integer type, given a
specific (inclusive) range it inhabits. For example:
bounded_integer!
let num = new.unwrap;
assert_eq!;
This macro supports both struct
s and enum
s. See the examples
module for the
documentation of generated types.
Const generics-based bounded integers
You can also create ad-hoc bounded integers via types in this library that use const generics, for example:
let num = new.unwrap;
assert_eq!;
These integers are shorter to use as they don't require a type declaration or explicit name.
However due to the limits of const generics, they may not implement some traits –
namely [Default
], bytemuck’s Zeroable
and zerocopy’s FromZeros
.
Also, unlike their macro counterparts they will not be subject to niche layout optimizations.
no_std
All the integers in this crate depend only on libcore and so work in #![no_std]
environments.
Crate Features
By default, no crate features are enabled.
std
: Interopate withstd
— impliesalloc
. Enables the following things:- An implementation of
Error
forParseError
.
- An implementation of
alloc
: Interopate withalloc
. Has no effect currently.macro
: Enable thebounded_integer!
macro.arbitrary1
: ImplementArbitrary
for the bounded integers. This is useful when using bounded integers as fuzzing inputs.bytemuck1
: ImplementContiguous
andNoUninit
for all bounded integers, andZeroable
for macro-generated bounded integers that support it.num-traits02
: ImplementBounded
,AsPrimitive
,FromPrimitive
,NumCast
,ToPrimitive
,CheckedAdd
,CheckedDiv
,CheckedMul
,CheckedNeg
,CheckedRem
,CheckedSub
,MulAdd
,SaturatingAdd
,SaturatingMul
andSaturatingSub
for all bounded integers.serde1
: ImplementSerialize
andDeserialize
for the bounded integers, making sure all values will never be out of bounds.zerocopy
: ImplementIntoBytes
andImmutable
for all bounded integers,Unaligned
for ones backed byu8
ori8
, andFromZeros
for suitable macro-generated ones.step_trait
: Implement theStep
trait which allows the bounded integers to be easily used in ranges. This will require you to use nightly and place#![feature(step_trait)]
in your crate root if you use the macro.