# safe-discriminant
`safe-discriminant` provides a minimalistic, `no_std` compatible trait and
procedural macro for extracting discriminants from enums at zero cost. It
automatically generates `unsafe { ... }` blocks, ensuring semantic safety so
you don’t have to worry about it.
## Installation
This crate is available on [crates.io](crates.io) and can be easily included in
your project by:
* Adding the following line to your Cargo.toml:
```toml
[dependencies]
safe-discriminant = "0.2.0"
```
* Or runing this command in your cargo project:
```sh
$ cargo add safe-discriminant
```
## Usage
```rust
use safe_discriminant::Discriminant;
#[derive(Discriminant)]
#[repr(i64)]
pub enum Foo<T> {
A = 1,
B(T) = -1,
C { fst: T, snd: T } = -2,
}
fn main() {
let a: Foo<u8> = Foo::A;
let b = Foo::B(5);
let c = Foo::C { fst: 2, snd: 3 };
assert_eq!(a.discriminant(), 1);
assert_eq!(b.discriminant(), -1);
assert_eq!(c.discriminant(), -2);
}
```
## Similar Projects
* [strum](https://crates.io/crates/strum) provides a collection of macros
designed to simplify working with enums. Among these macros is
[`EnumDiscriminants`](https://docs.rs/strum_macros/latest/strum_macros/derive.EnumDiscriminants.html),
which extracts the name of each variant from the enum and organizes them into
a separate enum.