Trait byteorder::ByteOrder [] [src]

pub trait ByteOrder {
    fn read_u16(buf: &[u8]) -> u16;
    fn read_u32(buf: &[u8]) -> u32;
    fn read_u64(buf: &[u8]) -> u64;
    fn read_uint(buf: &[u8], nbytes: usize) -> u64;
    fn write_u16(buf: &mut [u8], n: u16);
    fn write_u32(buf: &mut [u8], n: u32);
    fn write_u64(buf: &mut [u8], n: u64);

    fn read_i16(buf: &[u8]) -> i16 { ... }
    fn read_i32(buf: &[u8]) -> i32 { ... }
    fn read_i64(buf: &[u8]) -> i64 { ... }
    fn read_int(buf: &[u8], nbytes: usize) -> i64 { ... }
    fn read_f32(buf: &[u8]) -> f32 { ... }
    fn read_f64(buf: &[u8]) -> f64 { ... }
    fn write_i16(buf: &mut [u8], n: i16) { ... }
    fn write_i32(buf: &mut [u8], n: i32) { ... }
    fn write_i64(buf: &mut [u8], n: i64) { ... }
    fn write_f32(buf: &mut [u8], n: f32) { ... }
    fn write_f64(buf: &mut [u8], n: f64) { ... }
}

ByteOrder describes types that can serialize integers as bytes.

Note that Self does not appear anywhere in this trait's definition! Therefore, in order to use it, you'll need to use syntax like T::read_u16(&[0, 1]) where T implements ByteOrder.

This crate provides two types that implement ByteOrder: BigEndian and LittleEndian.

Examples

Write and read u32 numbers in little endian order:

use byteorder::{ByteOrder, LittleEndian};

let mut buf = [0; 4];
LittleEndian::write_u32(&mut buf, 1_000_000);
assert_eq!(1_000_000, LittleEndian::read_u32(&buf));

Write and read i16 numbers in big endian order:

use byteorder::{ByteOrder, BigEndian};

let mut buf = [0; 2];
BigEndian::write_i16(&mut buf, -50_000);
assert_eq!(-50_000, BigEndian::read_i16(&buf));

Required Methods

fn read_u16(buf: &[u8]) -> u16

Reads an unsigned 16 bit integer from buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 2.

fn read_u32(buf: &[u8]) -> u32

Reads an unsigned 32 bit integer from buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 4.

fn read_u64(buf: &[u8]) -> u64

Reads an unsigned 64 bit integer from buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 8.

fn read_uint(buf: &[u8], nbytes: usize) -> u64

Reads an unsigned n-bytes integer from buf.

Panics when nbytes < 1 or nbytes > 8 or buf.len() < nbytes

fn write_u16(buf: &mut [u8], n: u16)

Writes an unsigned 16 bit integer n to buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 2.

fn write_u32(buf: &mut [u8], n: u32)

Writes an unsigned 32 bit integer n to buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 4.

fn write_u64(buf: &mut [u8], n: u64)

Writes an unsigned 64 bit integer n to buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 8.

Provided Methods

fn read_i16(buf: &[u8]) -> i16

Reads a signed 16 bit integer from buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 2.

fn read_i32(buf: &[u8]) -> i32

Reads a signed 32 bit integer from buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 4.

fn read_i64(buf: &[u8]) -> i64

Reads a signed 64 bit integer from buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 8.

fn read_int(buf: &[u8], nbytes: usize) -> i64

Reads a signed n-bytes integer from buf.

Panics when nbytes < 1 or nbytes > 8 or buf.len() < nbytes

fn read_f32(buf: &[u8]) -> f32

Reads a IEEE754 single-precision (4 bytes) floating point number.

Panics when buf.len() < 4.

fn read_f64(buf: &[u8]) -> f64

Reads a IEEE754 double-precision (8 bytes) floating point number.

Panics when buf.len() < 8.

fn write_i16(buf: &mut [u8], n: i16)

Writes a signed 16 bit integer n to buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 2.

fn write_i32(buf: &mut [u8], n: i32)

Writes a signed 32 bit integer n to buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 4.

fn write_i64(buf: &mut [u8], n: i64)

Writes a signed 64 bit integer n to buf.

Panics when buf.len() < 8.

fn write_f32(buf: &mut [u8], n: f32)

Writes a IEEE754 single-precision (4 bytes) floating point number.

Panics when buf.len() < 4.

fn write_f64(buf: &mut [u8], n: f64)

Writes a IEEE754 double-precision (8 bytes) floating point number.

Panics when buf.len() < 8.

Implementors