Expand description
This crate allows data to write itself into Rust code (bake itself in).
Types that implement the Bake
trait can be written into Rust expressions,
which allows using Rust code itself as a zero-overhead “serialization” strategy.
§Example
use databake::*;
use alloc::borrow::Cow;
let data = [Some((18, Cow::Borrowed("hi")))];
assert_eq!(
data.bake(&Default::default()).to_string(),
r#"[Some ((18i32 , alloc :: borrow :: Cow :: Borrowed ("hi")))]"#,
);
§Derive
Bake
can be automatically derived if the derive
Cargo feature is enabled.
use databake::*;
#[derive(Bake)]
#[databake(path = my_crate)]
struct MyStruct {
number: u32,
string: &'static str,
slice: &'static [bool],
}
#[derive(Bake)]
#[databake(path = my_crate)]
struct AnotherOne(MyStruct, char);
§Testing
The test_bake
macro can be used to assert that a particular expression is a Bake
fixed point.
test_bake!(
AnotherOne,
const: crate::AnotherOne(
crate::MyStruct {
number: 17u32,
string: "foo",
slice: &[true, false],
},
'b',
),
my_crate,
);
Re-exports§
pub use proc_macro2::TokenStream;
pub use quote::quote;
Macros§
- This macro tests that an expression evaluates to a value that bakes to the same expression.
Structs§
- A collection of crates that are required for the evaluation of some expression.
Traits§
- The
Bake
trait allows a piece of data to write itself into a Rust expression.
Derive Macros§
- This custom derive auto-implements the
Bake
trait on any given type that has public fields that also implementBake
.