- Unary operator for retrieving the absolute value, enforcing an overflow never occurs. 
- Unary operator for retrieving the absolute value, bounding the difference to - MAXif an overflow occurs.
 
- Unary operator for retrieving the absolute value, wrapping the result if an overflow occurs. 
- The addition operator - +.
 
- The addition assignment operator - +=.
 
- Binary operator for adding two values, enforcing an overflow never occurs. 
- Binary operator for adding two values, bounding the sum to - MAXif an overflow occurs.
 
- Binary operator for adding two values, wrapping the sum if an overflow occurs. 
- Representation of an address. 
- Affine representation of an elliptic curve point guaranteed to be
in the correct prime order subgroup. 
- A generic interface for casting between machine scalars with the
- asoperator, which admits narrowing and precision loss.
Implementers of this trait- AsPrimitiveshould behave like a primitive
numeric type (e.g. a newtype around another primitive), and the
intended conversion must never fail.
 
- The bitwise AND operator - &.
 
- The bitwise AND assignment operator - &=.
 
- The bitwise OR operator - |.
 
- The bitwise OR assignment operator - |=.
 
- The bitwise XOR operator - ^.
 
- The bitwise XOR assignment operator - ^=.
 
- Representation of a boolean. 
- A trait for a commitment scheme. 
- A trait for a commitment scheme. 
- Trait for comparator operations. 
- A marker trait used to indicate that an  - RngCore-  or  - BlockRngCore- 
implementation is supposed to be cryptographically secure. 
- ?formatting.
 
- Used for immutable dereferencing operations, like - *v.
 
- Used for mutable dereferencing operations, like in - *v = 1;.
 
- A data structure that can be deserialized from any data format supported
by Serde. 
- A helper trait used to simplify value extraction. 
- A data structure that can be deserialized without borrowing any data from
the deserializer. 
- A data format that can deserialize any data structure supported by
Serde. 
- Format trait for an empty format, - {}.
 
- Types (distributions) that can be used to create a random instance of - T.
 
- The division operator - /.
 
- The division assignment operator - /=.
 
- Binary operator for dividing two values, enforcing an overflow never occurs. 
- Binary operator for dividing two values, bounding the quotient to - MAXor- MINif an overflow occurs.
 
- Binary operator for dividing two values, without checking specific conditions. 
- Binary operator for dividing two values, wrapping the quotient if an overflow occurs. 
- Unary operator for retrieving the doubled value. 
- Trait for equality comparisons. 
- Representation of a base field element. 
- Parse/convert base32 slice to - Self. It is the reciprocal of- ToBase32.
 
- Unary operator for converting from a base field element. 
- Unary operator for converting from a list of base elements. 
- Parse a value from a string 
- Representation of a group element. 
- A trait for a hash function. 
- A trait for a hash function that produces multiple outputs. 
- A trait for a hash function that projects the value to an affine group element. 
- A trait for a hash function that projects the value to a scalar. 
- A trait for a hash function of an uncompressed variant. 
- Properties common to all integer types. 
- Representation of an integer. 
- Trait bound for integer values. Common to both signed and unsigned integers. 
- Unary operator for retrieving the inverse value. 
- An  - Iterator-  blanket implementation that provides extra adaptors and
methods. 
- Trait for integers that can be used as an unsigned magnitude.
- Magnitudes are either used to represent an integer exponent
or the right operand in integer shift operations.
 
- Binary operator for modding two values. 
- The multiplication operator - *.
 
- The multiplication assignment operator - *=.
 
- Binary operator for multiplying two values, enforcing an overflow never occurs. 
- Binary operator for multiplying two values, bounding the product to - MAXif an overflow occurs.
 
- Binary operator for multiplying two values, wrapping the product if an overflow occurs. 
- Binary operator for performing - NOT (a AND b).
 
- The unary negation operator - -.
 
- Binary operator for performing - (NOT a) AND (NOT b).
 
- The unary logical negation operator - !.
 
- Defines a multiplicative identity element for - Self.
 
- A trait to unwrap a - Resultor- Halt.
 
- A trait for a pseudorandom function. 
- Operations to parse a string literal into an object. 
- Binary operator for raising a value to a power. 
- Binary operator for exponentiating two values, enforcing an overflow never occurs. 
- Binary operator for exponentiating two values, wrapping the result if an overflow occurs. 
- Trait to represent types that can be created by multiplying elements of an
iterator. 
- Projective representation of an elliptic curve point guaranteed to be in the prime order subgroup. 
- The - Readtrait allows for reading bytes from a source.
 
- The remainder operator - %.
 
- The remainder assignment operator - %=.
 
- Binary operator for dividing two values and returning the remainder, enforcing an overflow never occurs. 
- Binary operator for dividing two values, bounding the remainder to - MAXor- MINif an overflow occurs.
 
- Binary operator for dividing two values, wrapping the remainder if an overflow occurs. 
- An automatically-implemented extension trait on  - RngCore-  providing high-level
generic methods for sampling values and other convenience methods. 
- Representation of a scalar field element. 
- Provides a - Visitoraccess to each element of a sequence in the input.
 
- A data structure that can be serialized into any data format supported
by Serde. 
- Returned from - Serializer::serialize_seq.
 
- Returned from - Serializer::serialize_struct.
 
- A data format that can serialize any data structure supported by Serde. 
- The left shift operator - <<. Note that because this trait is implemented
for all integer types with multiple right-hand-side types, Rust’s type
checker has special handling for- _ << _, setting the result type for
integer operations to the type of the left-hand-side operand. This means
that though- a << band- a.shl(b)are one and the same from an evaluation
standpoint, they are different when it comes to type inference.
 
- The left shift assignment operator - <<=.
 
- Binary operator for left shifting a value, checking that the rhs is less than the number
of bits in self. 
- Binary operator for left shifting a value, safely continuing past the number of bits in self. 
- The right shift operator - >>. Note that because this trait is implemented
for all integer types with multiple right-hand-side types, Rust’s type
checker has special handling for- _ >> _, setting the result type for
integer operations to the type of the left-hand-side operand. This means
that though- a >> band- a.shr(b)are one and the same from an evaluation
standpoint, they are different when it comes to type inference.
 
- The right shift assignment operator - >>=.
 
- Binary operator for right shifting a value, checking that the rhs is less than the number
of bits in self. 
- Binary operator for right shifting a value, safely continuing past the number of bits in self. 
- Unary operator for retrieving the squared value. 
- Unary operator for retrieving the square root of the value. 
- Representation of a string. 
- The subtraction operator - -.
 
- The subtraction assignment operator - -=.
 
- Binary operator for subtracting two values, enforcing an underflow never occurs. 
- Binary operator for subtracting two values, bounding the difference to - MINif an underflow occurs.
 
- Binary operator for subtracting two values, wrapping the difference if an underflow occurs. 
- Trait to represent types that can be created by summing up an iterator. 
- Trait for ternary operations. 
- A trait for converting a value to a type - Tthat represents a- u5slice.
 
- Unary operator for converting to a base field. 
- Unary operator for converting to a list of base fields. 
- A trait for a uniform random number generator. 
- This trait represents a visitor that walks through a deserializer. 
- A trait for objects which are byte-oriented sinks. 
- Defines an additive identity element for - Self.
 
- The interface for a generic field. 
- Recognizes one or more lowercase and uppercase ASCII alphabetic characters: a-z, A-Z 
- Recognizes one or more ASCII numerical and alphabetic characters: 0-9, a-z, A-Z 
- Tests a list of parsers one by one until one succeeds. 
- Recognizes one character. 
- Transforms Incomplete into - Error.
 
- Converts a - ParserResultinto a human-readable message.
 
- Runs the embedded parser - counttimes, gathering the results in a- Vec
 
- A parser which always fails. 
- Returns true if the given iterator has duplicate elements. 
- Repeats the embedded parser, gathering the results in a - Vec.
 
- Repeats the embedded parser, counting the results 
- Runs the embedded parser, gathering the results in a - Vec.
 
- Maps a function on the result of a parser. 
- Applies a function returning a - Resultover the result of a parser.
 
- Recognizes one of the provided characters. 
- Optional parser, will return - Noneon [- Err::Error].
 
- Gets an object from the first parser,
then gets another object from the second parser. 
- Decode the value of a variable length integer.
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Protocol_documentation#Variable_length_integer 
- If the child parser was successful, return the consumed input as produced value. 
- Alternates between two parsers to produce a list of elements. 
- Alternates between two parsers to produce a list of elements until [- Err::Error].
 
- Recognizes a pattern 
- Returns an input slice containing the first N input elements (Input[..N]). 
- Gets an object from the first parser,
then matches an object from the second parser and discards it. 
- Returns the variable length integer of the given value.
https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Protocol_documentation#Variable_length_integer