pub struct Selectionless(/* private fields */);Expand description
A Text that is guaranteed not to have Selections in it
Useful for sending across threads, especially when it comes to
Logs.
Implementations§
Methods from Deref<Target = Text>§
Sourcepub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool
Whether or not there are any characters in the Text
This ignores the last '\n' in the Text, since it is
always there no matter what.
This does not check for tags, so with a Ghost,
there could actually be a “string” of characters on the
Text, it just wouldn’t be considered real “text”. If you
want to make sure it is indeed empty, see
is_empty_empty.
Sourcepub fn is_empty_empty(&self) -> bool
pub fn is_empty_empty(&self) -> bool
Sourcepub fn strs(&self, range: impl TextRange) -> Strs<'_> ⓘ
pub fn strs(&self, range: impl TextRange) -> Strs<'_> ⓘ
An Iterator over the &strs of the Text
§Note
The reason why this function returns two strings is that the
contents of the text are stored in a GapBuffer, which
works with two strings.
If you want to iterate over them, you can do the following:
let text = Text::new();
text.strs(p1..p2).flat_map(str::chars);Do note that you should avoid iterators like str::lines,
as they will separate the line that is partially owned by each
&str:
let broken_up_line = [
"This is line 1, business as usual.\nThis is line 2, but it",
"is broken into two separate strings.\nSo 4 lines would be counted, instead of 3",
];§TextRange behavior:
If you give a single usize/Point, it will be
interpreted as a range from.
Sourcepub fn lines(&self, range: impl TextRange) -> Lines<'_>
pub fn lines(&self, range: impl TextRange) -> Lines<'_>
Returns an iterator over the lines in a given range
The lines are inclusive, that is, it will iterate over the whole line, not just the parts within the range.
Sourcepub fn indent(&self, p: Point, area: &impl RawArea, cfg: PrintCfg) -> usize
pub fn indent(&self, p: Point, area: &impl RawArea, cfg: PrintCfg) -> usize
Gets the indentation level on the current line
Sourcepub fn point_at(&self, b: usize) -> Point
pub fn point_at(&self, b: usize) -> Point
The Point corresponding to the byte position, 0 indexed
If the byte position would fall in between two characters
(because the first one comprises more than one byte), the
first character is chosen as the Point where the byte is
located.
§Panics
Will panic if b is greater than the length of the text
Sourcepub fn point_at_char(&self, c: usize) -> Point
pub fn point_at_char(&self, c: usize) -> Point
Sourcepub fn point_at_line(&self, l: usize) -> Point
pub fn point_at_line(&self, l: usize) -> Point
Sourcepub fn points_of_line(&self, l: usize) -> [Point; 2]
pub fn points_of_line(&self, l: usize) -> [Point; 2]
Sourcepub fn len_points(&self) -> (Point, Option<Point>)
pub fn len_points(&self) -> (Point, Option<Point>)
The points at the end of the text
This will essentially return the last point of the text,
alongside the last possible Point of any
Ghost at the end of the text.
Sourcepub fn last_point(&self) -> Option<Point>
pub fn last_point(&self) -> Option<Point>
Sourcepub fn points_after(&self, tp: impl TwoPoints) -> Option<(Point, Option<Point>)>
pub fn points_after(&self, tp: impl TwoPoints) -> Option<(Point, Option<Point>)>
Points visually after the TwoPoints
If the TwoPoints in question is concealed, treats the
next visible character as the first character, and returns
the points of the next visible character.
This method is useful if you want to iterator reversibly right after a certain point, thus including the character of said point.
Sourcepub fn has_unsaved_changes(&self) -> bool
pub fn has_unsaved_changes(&self) -> bool
Sourcepub fn iter_fwd(&self, at: impl TwoPoints) -> FwdIter<'_> ⓘ
pub fn iter_fwd(&self, at: impl TwoPoints) -> FwdIter<'_> ⓘ
A forward iterator of the chars and tags of the Text
Sourcepub fn iter_rev(&self, at: impl TwoPoints) -> RevIter<'_> ⓘ
pub fn iter_rev(&self, at: impl TwoPoints) -> RevIter<'_> ⓘ
A reverse iterator of the chars and tags of the Text
Sourcepub fn chars_fwd(&self, p: Point) -> impl Iterator<Item = (Point, char)> + '_
pub fn chars_fwd(&self, p: Point) -> impl Iterator<Item = (Point, char)> + '_
A forward iterator of the chars of the Text
Each char will be accompanied by a Point, which is the
position where said character starts, e.g.
Point::default() for the first character
Sourcepub fn chars_rev(&self, p: Point) -> impl Iterator<Item = (Point, char)> + '_
pub fn chars_rev(&self, p: Point) -> impl Iterator<Item = (Point, char)> + '_
A reverse iterator of the chars of the Text
Each char will be accompanied by a Point, which is the
position where said character starts, e.g.
Point::default() for the first character
A forward Iterator over the RawTags
This Iterator does not take into account Tag ranges
that intersect with the starting point, unlike
Text::tags_fwd
A reverse Iterator over the RawTags
This Iterator does not take into account Tag ranges
that intersect with the starting point, unlike
Text::tags_rev
Sourcepub fn selections(&self) -> Option<&Selections>
pub fn selections(&self) -> Option<&Selections>
The Selections printed to this Text, if they exist
Sourcepub fn get_contiguous(&self, range: impl TextRange) -> Option<&str>
pub fn get_contiguous(&self, range: impl TextRange) -> Option<&str>
Assumes that the range given is contiguous in self
You MUST call make_contiguous before using this
function. The sole purpose of this function is to not keep the
Bytes mutably borrowed.
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Clone for Selectionless
impl Clone for Selectionless
Source§fn clone(&self) -> Selectionless
fn clone(&self) -> Selectionless
1.0.0 · Source§const fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
const fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source. Read more