Crate quick_error [] [src]

A macro which makes errors easy to write

Minimum type is like this:


#[macro_use] extern crate quick_error;

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        Variant1 {}
    }
}

Both pub and non-public types may be declared, and all meta attributes (such as #[derive(Debug)]) are forwarded as is.

You may add arbitrary parameters to any struct variant:

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        Io(err: io::Error) {}
        Sys(errno: nix::Errno) {}
    }
}

Note unlike in normal Enum decarations you declare names of fields (which are omitted from type). How they can be used is outlined below.

Now you might have noticed trailing braces {}. They are used to define implementations. By default:

  • Error::description() returns variant name as static string
  • Error::cause() returns None (even if type wraps some value)
  • Display outputs description()
  • No From implementations are defined

To define description simply add description(value) inside braces:

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        Io(err: io::Error) {
            description(err.description())
        }
        Sys(errno: nix::Errno) {
            description("system error")
        }
    }
}

Normal rules for borrowing apply. So most of the time description either returns constant string or forwards description from enclosed type.

To change cause method to return some error, add cause(value), for example:

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        Io(err: io::Error) {
            cause(err)
            description(err.description())
        }
        Sys(errno: nix::Errno) {
            description("system error")
        }
    }
}

Note you don't need to wrap value in Some, its implicit. In case you want None returned just omit the cause. You can't return None conditionally.

To change how each clause is Displayed add display(pattern,..args), for example:

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        Io(err: io::Error) {
            display("I/O error: {}", err)
        }
        Sys(errno: nix::Errno) {
            display("System error, errno ({:x})", errno)
        }
    }
}

To convert to the type from any other, use one of the three forms of from clause.

For example, to convert simple wrapper use bare from():

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        Io(err: io::Error) {
            from()
        }
    }

This implements From<io::Error>.

To convert to singleton enumeration type (discarding the value), use the from(type) form:

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        FormatError {
            from(std::fmt::Error)
        }
    }

And the most powerful form is from(var: type) -> (arguments...). It might be used to convert to type with multiple arguments or for arbitrary value conversions:

quick_error! {
    #[derive(Debug)]
    pub enum SomeError {
        FailedOperation(s: &'static str, errno: i32) {
            from(errno: i32) -> ("os error", i32)
            from(e: io::Error) -> ("io error", e.raw_os_error().unwrap())
        }
        /// Converts from both kinds of utf8 errors
        Utf8(err: std::str::Utf8Error) {
            from()
            from(err: std::string::FromUtf8Error) -> (err.utf8_error())
        }
    }

All forms of from, display, description, cause clauses can be combined and put in arbitrary order. Only from may be used multiple times in single variant of enumeration. Docstrings are also okay. Empty braces can't be omitted.

Macros

quick_error!

Main macro that does all the work