derive-deftly: An ergonomic replacement for many proc macros
derive-deftly allows you to write macros which are driven
by Rust data structures, just like proc macro derive macros,
but without having to wrestle with the proc macro system.
Stability
We intend to make a 1.x release of this crate very soon. We expect that derive-deftly 1.x will be compatible with 0.14.x.
Overview
You can write an ad-hoc template, which can speak about the fields and types in the data structure. You can also define named templates and apply them to multiple structures: effectively, you can define your own derive macro.
You don't need to make a separate proc macro crate,
write to the syn and proc_macro APIs.
take care to properly propagate compile errors,
or, generally, do any of the things that
make writing proc macros so complicated.
The template language resembles the "expander" part
of a macro_rules macro,
but you don't have to write the "matcher" part:
derive-deftly parses the input data structure for you,
and makes the pieces available via predefined expansion variables.
Further documentation is available in the doc_ module(s)
and the docs for the individual proc macros.
Simple example - providing Vec containing enum variant names
use derive_deftly::{define_derive_deftly, Deftly};
define_derive_deftly! {
ListVariants:
impl $ttype {
fn list_variants() -> Vec<&'static str> {
vec![ $( stringify!( $vname ) , ) ]
}
}
}
#[derive(Deftly)]
#[derive_deftly(ListVariants)]
enum Enum {
UnitVariant,
StructVariant { a: u8, b: u16 },
TupleVariant(u8, u16),
}
assert_eq!(
Enum::list_variants(),
["UnitVariant", "StructVariant", "TupleVariant"],
);
Next steps
Why not have a look at our friendly user guide? It will walk you through derive-deftly's most important features, with a number of worked examples.
Alternatively, there is comprehensive reference documentation.