Generate Rust enum variants without associated data
use kinded::Kinded;
#[derive(Kinded)]
enum Drink {
Mate,
Coffee(String),
Tea { variety: String, caffeine: bool }
}
let drink = Drink::Coffee("Espresso".to_owned());
assert_eq!(drink.kind(), DrinkKind::Coffee);
Note, the definition of DrinkKind
enum is generated automatically as well as Drink::kind()
method.
To put it simply you get something similar to the following:
#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq)]
enum DrinkKind {
Mate,
Coffee,
Tea
}
impl Drink {
fn kind(&self) -> DrinkKind {
Drink::Mate => DrinkKind::Mate,
Drink::Coffee(..) => DrinkKind::Coffee,
Drink::Tea { .. } => DrinkKind::Tea,
}
}
The library provides Kinded
trait:
pub trait Kinded {
type Kind: PartialEq + Eq + Debug + Clone + Copy;
fn kind(&self) -> Self::Kind;
}
From the example above, the derived implementation of Kinded
for Drink
resembles the following:
impl Kinded for Drink {
type Kind = DrinkKind;
fn kind(&self) -> DrinkKind { /* implementation */ }
}
The Kinded
trait allows to build abstract functions that can be used with different enum types.
The kind type gets implementation of ::all()
associated function, which returns a vector with all kind variants:
assert_eq!(DrinkKind::all(), [DrinkKind::Mate, DrinkKind::Coffee, DrinkKind::Tea]);
By default the kind type name is generated by adding postfix Kind
to the original enum name.
This can be customized with kind =
attribute:
use kinded::Kinded;
#[derive(Kinded)]
#[kinded(kind = SimpleDrink)]
enum Drink {
Mate,
Coffee(String),
Tea { variety: String, caffeine: bool }
}
By default the kind type implements the following traits: Debug
, Clone
, Copy
, PartialEq
, Eq
, Display
, FromStr
, From<T>
, From<&T>
.
Extra traits can be derived with derive(..)
attribute:
use kinded::Kinded;
use std::collections::HashSet;
#[derive(Kinded)]
#[kinded(derive(Hash))]
enum Drink {
Mate,
Coffee(String),
Tea { variety: String, caffeine: bool }
}
let mut drink_kinds = HashSet::new();
drink_kinds.insert(DrinkKind::Mate);
Implementation of Display
trait can be customized in the serde
fashion:
use kinded::Kinded;
#[derive(Kinded)]
#[kinded(display = "snake_case")]
enum Drink {
VeryHotBlackTea,
Milk { fat: f64 },
}
let tea = DrinkKind::VeryHotBlackTea;
assert_eq!(tea.to_string(), "very_hot_black_tea");
The possible values are "snake_case"
, "camelCase"
, "PascalCase"
, "SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE"
, "kebab-case"
, "SCREAMING-KEBAB-CASE"
, "Title Case"
, "lowercase"
, "UPPERCASE"
.
The kind type implements FromStr
trait. The implementation tries it's best to parse, checking all the possible cases mentioned above.
use kinded::Kinded;
#[derive(Kinded)]
#[kinded(display = "snake_case")]
enum Drink {
VeryHotBlackTea,
Milk { fat: f64 },
}
assert_eq!(
"VERY_HOT_BLACK_TEA".parse::<DrinkKind>().unwrap(),
DrinkKind::VeryHotBlackTea
);
assert_eq!(
"veryhotblacktea".parse::<DrinkKind>().unwrap(),
DrinkKind::VeryHotBlackTea
);
There is a very similar crate enum-kinds that does almost the same job.
Here is what makes kinded
different:
- It provides
Kinded
trait, on top of which users can build abstractions. - Generates customizable implementation of
Display
trait. - Generates implementation of
FromStr
trait. - Generates
kind()
function to extra ergonomics.
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