# `fast-cat`
[](https://crates.io/crates/fast-cat)
[](https://docs.rs/fast-cat)
[](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
An ergonomic macro for highly efficient string concatenation with a single memory allocation.
### Why use `fast-cat`?
Standard methods like `format!` or using the `+` operator can be inefficient for joining multiple strings, often leading to several memory re-allocations. This crate provides a `concat_str!` macro that solves this problem by first calculating the total size of all string parts and then performing only a **single memory allocation**.
It gives you the performance of a manually optimized `String::with_capacity` approach but with a much cleaner and more convenient syntax.
### Features
* ⚡ **Blazingly Fast**: Significantly outperforms `format!` and `+` for string concatenation (see benchmarks below).
* ⚙️ **Single Allocation**: Avoids intermediate allocations, reducing memory pressure and improving performance.
* 🕊️ **Zero Dependencies**: This crate has **no dependencies**, which means fast compile times and no extra bloat for your project.
* ✍️ **Ergonomic**: Clean, intuitive syntax that is easy to read and write.
### Installation
Add this to your `Cargo.toml`:
```toml
[dependencies]
fast-cat = "0.1.0" # Replace with the latest version
```
### Usage
The `concat_str!` macro accepts any number of comma-separated arguments that can be referenced as a `&str`, including string literals, `String` variables, and `&str` slices.
```rust
use fast_cat::concat_str;
fn main() {
let world = "world".to_string();
let excitement = "!";
// Mix and match literals, owned Strings, and slices
let greeting = concat_str!("Hello, ", &world, excitement);
assert_eq!(greeting, "Hello, world!");
}
```
### Benchmarks
Benchmarks show that `concat_str!` is not only significantly faster than standard library alternatives but also manages to outperform a hand-written, manually optimized implementation.
The test scenario involved concatenating 6 string parts of mixed types (`&str` and `String`).
| ✅ **`concat_str!` (Ours)** | **47.8 ns** | **1.0x** |
| `manual_with_capacity` | 54.2 ns | Same |
| `[T]::concat()` | 69.6 ns | ~1.5x slower |
| `addition (+)` | 222.7 ns | ~4.7x slower |
| `format!` | 256.1 ns | ~5.4x slower |
*Results were obtained on a specific machine and may vary. The relative performance is the key takeaway.*
As the data shows, `concat_str!` provides the best performance, making it an ideal choice for performance-sensitive applications.
### License
This project is licensed under either of
* Apache License, Version 2.0, ([LICENSE-APACHE](LICENSE-APACHE) or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
* MIT license ([LICENSE-MIT](LICENSE-MIT) or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.