Crate enumscribe

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Traits for converting between enums and strings. Intended to be used alongside the enumscribe_derive crate, which provides derive macros for these traits.

Here is a basic usage example:

use enumscribe::{ScribeStaticStr, TryUnscribe};

#[derive(ScribeStaticStr, TryUnscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Airport {
    #[enumscribe(str = "LHR")]
    Heathrow,
    #[enumscribe(str = "LGW")]
    Gatwick,
    #[enumscribe(str = "LTN")]
    Luton,
}

// Convert an Airport to a &'static str
assert_eq!(Airport::Heathrow.scribe(), "LHR");

// Convert a &str to a Option<Airport>
assert_eq!(Airport::try_unscribe("LGW"), Some(Airport::Gatwick));

The #[enumscribe(str = "...")] allows us to specify what string should be used to represent a particular variant. If this is omitted, the name of the variant will be used instead.

The #[enumscribe(case_insensitive)] attribute can be used to make the “Unscribe” traits perform case-insensitive matching for a variant:

use enumscribe::TryUnscribe;

#[derive(TryUnscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Website {
    #[enumscribe(str = "github.com", case_insensitive)]
    Github,
    #[enumscribe(str = "crates.io", case_insensitive)]
    CratesDotIo,
}

assert_eq!(Website::try_unscribe("GiThUb.CoM"), Some(Website::Github));

The same attribute can be used on the enum itself to make all variants case-insensitive. Individual fields may opt back in to case sensitivity with #[enumscribe(case_sensitive)].

use enumscribe::TryUnscribe;

#[derive(TryUnscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
#[enumscribe(case_insensitive)]
enum Website {
    #[enumscribe(str = "github.com")]
    Github,
    #[enumscribe(str = "crates.io")]
    CratesDotIo,
}
assert_eq!(Website::try_unscribe("CrAtEs.Io"), Some(Website::CratesDotIo));

You can also have a variant which stores strings that could not be matched to any other variant. This is done using the #[enumscribe(other)] attribute. The variant should have a single field, which is a String.

use std::borrow::Cow;

use enumscribe::{Unscribe, ScribeCowStr};

#[derive(ScribeCowStr, Unscribe, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Website {
    #[enumscribe(str = "github.com", case_insensitive)]
    Github,
    #[enumscribe(str = "crates.io", case_insensitive)]
    CratesDotIo,
    #[enumscribe(other)]
    Other(String),
}

// Note that we don't need to use an Option anymore!
assert_eq!(Website::unscribe("github.com"),
           Website::Github);

// Unbelievably, websites exist other than github and crates.io
assert_eq!(Website::unscribe("stackoverflow.com"),
           Website::Other("stackoverflow.com".to_owned()));

// We can't scribe to a &'static str anymore, so we use a Cow<'static, str> instead
assert_eq!(Website::Github.scribe(),
           Cow::Borrowed::<'static, str>("github.com"));

assert_eq!(Website::Other("owasp.org".to_owned()).scribe(),
           Cow::Owned::<'static, str>("owasp.org".to_owned()));

If you need to, you can use #[enumscribe(ignore)] to prevent a variant from being used by Scribe or Unscribe traits.

However, this means that converting the enum to a string can fail, so you must use TryScribe instead of Scribe in this case.

use enumscribe::TryScribeStaticStr;

#[derive(TryScribeStaticStr, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
enum Airport {
    #[enumscribe(str = "LHR")]
    Heathrow,
    #[enumscribe(str = "LGW")]
    Gatwick,
    #[enumscribe(str = "LTN")]
    Luton,
    #[enumscribe(ignore)]
    SecretExtraVariant(i32), // we have to ignore this variant because of the i32 field
}

assert_eq!(Airport::SecretExtraVariant(123).try_scribe(), None);

assert_eq!(Airport::Luton.try_scribe(), Some("LTN"));

You can derive serde::Serialize and serde::Deserialize using the same syntax:

use serde::{Serialize, Deserialize};

use enumscribe::{EnumSerialize, EnumDeserialize};

#[derive(EnumSerialize, EnumDeserialize, PartialEq, Eq, Clone, Copy, Debug)]
enum Airport {
    #[enumscribe(str = "LHR")]
    Heathrow,
    #[enumscribe(str = "LGW")]
    Gatwick,
    #[enumscribe(str = "LTN")]
    Luton,
}

#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, PartialEq, Eq, Debug)]
struct Flight {
    takeoff: Airport,
    landing: Airport,
}

// There are probably much more economical ways of making this journey
let flight = Flight {
    takeoff: Airport::Heathrow,
    landing: Airport::Gatwick,
};

let flight_json = r#"{"takeoff":"LHR","landing":"LGW"}"#;

assert_eq!(serde_json::to_string(&flight)?,
           flight_json.to_owned());

assert_eq!(serde_json::from_str::<Flight>(flight_json)?,
           flight);

Here is a table to show which traits you should derive for your enum:

ignore used?other used?Conversion to stringConversion from string
NoNoScribeStaticStrTryUnscribe
NoYesScribeCowStrUnscribe
YesNoTryScribeStaticStrTryUnscribe
YesYesTryScribeCowStrUnscribe

There are also ScribeString and TryScribeString traits which can be used in the same situations as ScribeCowStr and TryScribeCowStr, respectively. These traits produce a String rather than a Cow<'static, str>, so they will always perform an allocation. Therefore, you should prefer the ScribeCowStr traits over the ScribeString traits, unless you really don’t want to use a Cow for whatever reason.

Modules

  • Utilities for use by code generated by enumscribe_derive.

Traits

  • Trait for converting an enum to a clone-on-write string.
  • Trait for converting an enum to a static string slice.
  • Trait for converting an enum to an allocated string. Generally, ScribeCowStr should be preferred over this trait because it avoids unnecessary allocations.
  • Trait for converting an enum to a clone-on-write string, or None if the conversion fails.
  • Trait for converting an enum to a static string slice, or None if the conversion fails.
  • Trait for converting an enum to an allocated string, or None if the conversion fails. Generally, TryScribeCowStr should be preferred over this trait because it avoids unnecessary allocations.
  • Trait for converting from a string to an enum, or None if the conversion fails.
  • Trait for converting from a string to an enum.

Derive Macros