num_enum 0.5.11

Procedural macros to make inter-operation between primitives and enums easier.
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num_enum

Procedural macros to make inter-operation between primitives and enums easier. This crate is no_std compatible.

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Turning an enum into a primitive

use num_enum::IntoPrimitive;

#[derive(IntoPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero,
    One,
}

fn main() {
    let zero: u8 = Number::Zero.into();
    assert_eq!(zero, 0u8);
}

num_enum's IntoPrimitive is more type-safe than using as, because as will silently truncate - num_enum only derives From for exactly the discriminant type of the enum.

Attempting to turn a primitive into an enum with try_from

use num_enum::TryFromPrimitive;
use std::convert::TryFrom;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, TryFromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero,
    One,
}

fn main() {
    let zero = Number::try_from(0u8);
    assert_eq!(zero, Ok(Number::Zero));

    let three = Number::try_from(3u8);
    assert_eq!(
        three.unwrap_err().to_string(),
        "No discriminant in enum `Number` matches the value `3`",
    );
}

Variant alternatives

Sometimes a single enum variant might be representable by multiple numeric values.

The #[num_enum(alternatives = [..])] attribute allows you to define additional value alternatives for individual variants.

(The behavior of IntoPrimitive is unaffected by this attribute, it will always return the canonical value.)

use num_enum::TryFromPrimitive;
use std::convert::TryFrom;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, TryFromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero = 0,
    #[num_enum(alternatives = [2])]
    OneOrTwo = 1,
}

fn main() {
    let zero = Number::try_from(0u8);
    assert_eq!(zero, Ok(Number::Zero));

    let one = Number::try_from(1u8);
    assert_eq!(one, Ok(Number::OneOrTwo));

    let two = Number::try_from(2u8);
    assert_eq!(two, Ok(Number::OneOrTwo));

    let three = Number::try_from(3u8);
    assert_eq!(
        three.unwrap_err().to_string(),
        "No discriminant in enum `Number` matches the value `3`",
    );
}

Range expressions are also supported for alternatives, but this requires enabling the complex-expressions feature:

use num_enum::TryFromPrimitive;
use std::convert::TryFrom;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, TryFromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero = 0,
    #[num_enum(alternatives = [2..16])]
    Some = 1,
    #[num_enum(alternatives = [17, 18..=255])]
    Many = 16,
}

fn main() {
    let zero = Number::try_from(0u8);
    assert_eq!(zero, Ok(Number::Zero));

    let some = Number::try_from(15u8);
    assert_eq!(some, Ok(Number::Some));

    let many = Number::try_from(255u8);
    assert_eq!(many, Ok(Number::Many));
}

Default variant

Sometimes it is desirable to have an Other variant in an enum that acts as a kind of a wildcard matching all the value not yet covered by other variants.

The #[num_enum(default)] attribute allows you to mark variant as the default.

(The behavior of IntoPrimitive is unaffected by this attribute, it will always return the canonical value.)

use num_enum::TryFromPrimitive;
use std::convert::TryFrom;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, TryFromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero = 0,
    #[num_enum(default)]
    NonZero = 1,
}

fn main() {
    let zero = Number::try_from(0u8);
    assert_eq!(zero, Ok(Number::Zero));

    let one = Number::try_from(1u8);
    assert_eq!(one, Ok(Number::NonZero));

    let two = Number::try_from(2u8);
    assert_eq!(two, Ok(Number::NonZero));
}

Safely turning a primitive into an exhaustive enum with from_primitive

If your enum has all possible primitive values covered, you can derive FromPrimitive for it (which auto-implement stdlib's From):

You can cover all possible values by:

  • Having variants for every possible value
  • Having a variant marked #[num_enum(default)]
  • Having a variant marked #[num_enum(catch_all)]
  • Having #[num_enum(alternatives = [...])s covering values not covered by a variant.
use num_enum::FromPrimitive;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, FromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero,
    #[num_enum(default)]
    NonZero,
}

fn main() {
    assert_eq!(
        Number::Zero,
        Number::from(0_u8),
    );
    assert_eq!(
        Number::NonZero,
        Number::from(1_u8),
    );
}

Catch-all variant

Sometimes it is desirable to have an Other variant which holds the otherwise un-matched value as a field.

The #[num_enum(catch_all)] attribute allows you to mark at most one variant for this purpose. The variant it's applied to must be a tuple variant with exactly one field matching the repr type.

use num_enum::FromPrimitive;
use std::convert::TryFrom;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, FromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero = 0,
    #[num_enum(catch_all)]
    NonZero(u8),
}

fn main() {
    let zero = Number::from(0u8);
    assert_eq!(zero, Number::Zero);

    let one = Number::from(1u8);
    assert_eq!(one, Number::NonZero(1_u8));

    let two = Number::from(2u8);
    assert_eq!(two, Number::NonZero(2_u8));
}

As this is naturally exhaustive, this is only supported for FromPrimitive, not also TryFromPrimitive.

Unsafely turning a primitive into an enum with from_unchecked

If you're really certain a conversion will succeed (and have not made use of #[num_enum(default)] or #[num_enum(alternatives = [..])] for any of its variants), and want to avoid a small amount of overhead, you can use unsafe code to do this conversion. Unless you have data showing that the match statement generated in the try_from above is a bottleneck for you, you should avoid doing this, as the unsafe code has potential to cause serious memory issues in your program.

use num_enum::UnsafeFromPrimitive;

#[derive(Debug, Eq, PartialEq, UnsafeFromPrimitive)]
#[repr(u8)]
enum Number {
    Zero,
    One,
}

fn main() {
    assert_eq!(
        unsafe { Number::from_unchecked(0_u8) },
        Number::Zero,
    );
    assert_eq!(
        unsafe { Number::from_unchecked(1_u8) },
        Number::One,
    );
}

unsafe fn undefined_behavior() {
    let _ = Number::from_unchecked(2); // 2 is not a valid discriminant!
}

Optional features

Some enum values may be composed of complex expressions, for example:

enum Number {
    Zero = (0, 1).0,
    One = (0, 1).1,
}

To cut down on compile time, these are not supported by default, but if you enable the complex-expressions feature of your dependency on num_enum, these should start working.

License

num_enum may be used under your choice of the BSD 3-clause, Apache 2, or MIT license.