pub enum Breakpoint {
None,
Small,
Medium,
Large,
XLarge,
XXLarge,
}Expand description
Breakpoint definitions
Variants§
Trait Implementations§
Source§impl Breakpoint for Breakpoint
impl Breakpoint for Breakpoint
Source§impl Clone for Breakpoint
impl Clone for Breakpoint
Source§fn clone(&self) -> Breakpoint
fn clone(&self) -> Breakpoint
1.0.0§fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
source. Read moreSource§impl Debug for Breakpoint
impl Debug for Breakpoint
Source§impl Display for Breakpoint
impl Display for Breakpoint
Source§impl Ord for Breakpoint
impl Ord for Breakpoint
Source§impl PartialEq for Breakpoint
impl PartialEq for Breakpoint
Source§impl PartialOrd for Breakpoint
impl PartialOrd for Breakpoint
impl Copy for Breakpoint
impl Eq for Breakpoint
impl StructuralPartialEq for Breakpoint
Auto Trait Implementations§
impl Freeze for Breakpoint
impl RefUnwindSafe for Breakpoint
impl Send for Breakpoint
impl Sync for Breakpoint
impl Unpin for Breakpoint
impl UnwindSafe for Breakpoint
Blanket Implementations§
§impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for Twhere
T: ?Sized,
§fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
§impl<T> CloneToUninit for Twhere
T: Clone,
impl<T> CloneToUninit for Twhere
T: Clone,
§unsafe fn clone_to_uninit(&self, dest: *mut u8)
unsafe fn clone_to_uninit(&self, dest: *mut u8)
clone_to_uninit)Source§impl<Q, K> Comparable<K> for Q
impl<Q, K> Comparable<K> for Q
Source§impl<Q, K> Equivalent<K> for Q
impl<Q, K> Equivalent<K> for Q
Source§impl<Q, K> Equivalent<K> for Q
impl<Q, K> Equivalent<K> for Q
Source§fn equivalent(&self, key: &K) -> bool
fn equivalent(&self, key: &K) -> bool
key and return true if they are equal.Source§impl<T> Instrument for T
impl<T> Instrument for T
Source§fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
fn instrument(self, span: Span) -> Instrumented<Self>
Source§fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>
fn in_current_span(self) -> Instrumented<Self>
Source§impl<T> IntoPropValue<Option<T>> for T
impl<T> IntoPropValue<Option<T>> for T
Source§fn into_prop_value(self) -> Option<T>
fn into_prop_value(self) -> Option<T>
self to a value of a Properties struct.Source§impl<T> IntoPropValue<T> for T
impl<T> IntoPropValue<T> for T
Source§fn into_prop_value(self) -> T
fn into_prop_value(self) -> T
self to a value of a Properties struct.Source§impl<T> IntoTruncateContent for Twhere
T: ToString,
impl<T> IntoTruncateContent for Twhere
T: ToString,
Source§fn truncate_before(self, num: usize) -> TruncateContent
fn truncate_before(self, num: usize) -> TruncateContent
This function is supposed to truncate num characters before the end of the string.
§Bytes, Code Points, and Grapheme Clusters
However, what it actually does is to truncate the string at the next Unicode code point,
after num bytes (not characters). This is quick and should work reasonably well with
the Latin 1 character set (or, UTF-8 characters which are represented by a single byte).
Given a string with multi-byte code points, or even grapheme clusters (user-perceived characters, which may consists of multiple Unicode code points), this will split at the wrong location.
It will still split, and not skip any data. But it might lead to an unexpected (shorter) end section.
What about an actual correct implementation? That would be possible by using an additional dependency. It would also need to count all code points and grapheme clusters from the start of the string. The question is: is that worth it? Maybe, maybe not!?