Expand description
§gstr
§GStr
GStr is an immutable string implementation optimized for small strings and comparison.
The size of GStr or Option<GStr> is guaranteed to be 16 bytes on 64-bit platforms or 12 bytes on 32-bit platforms.
The first 4 bytes of the string buffer are inlined in GStr, so comparing two GStrs is faster than comparing two strs in most cases.
The maximum length of GStr is i32::MAX.
§SharedGStr
SharedGStr is similar to GStr, but using the atomic reference counting internally, so cloning a SharedGStr only takes O(1) time.
The maximum length of SharedGStr is i32::MAX on 64-bit platforms or i32::MAX - 7 on 32-bit platforms.
§Usage
use gstr::GStr;
// This clones the string into the heap memory.
let gstr = GStr::new("Hello, World!");
assert_eq!(gstr, "Hello, World!");
// `GStr` can be constructed from a static string in const context without allocating memory.
let gstr = const { GStr::from_static("Hello, Rust!") };
assert_eq!(gstr, "Hello, Rust!");
// `GStr` can be converted from `String` without allocating memory.
let gstr = GStr::from_string(String::from("Hello, 🦀 and 🌎!"));
assert_eq!(gstr, "Hello, 🦀 and 🌎!");§Features
gstr supports no_std, but needs the alloc crate to work.
gstr has the following features:
std: Enable support for some types instd. It’s enabled by default.serde: Enable serialization and deserialization support forserde.rkyv: Enable serialization and deserialization support forrkyv.
§Warnings
gstr is not tested on big-endian platforms, but it maybe works fine on them.
Modules§
- gstr
- An immutable string implementation optimized for small strings and comparison.
Type Aliases§
- GStr
- An immutable string implementation optimized for small strings and comparison.
- SharedG
Str - An immutable string implementation optimized for small strings and comparison.