11 releases
0.5.2 | Dec 22, 2022 |
---|---|
0.5.1 | Oct 14, 2022 |
0.5.0 | Aug 19, 2022 |
0.4.4 | Apr 12, 2021 |
0.1.0 | Mar 18, 2021 |
#232 in Rust patterns
38,202 downloads per month
Used in 17 crates
(9 directly)
53KB
992 lines
Easy-cast
Type conversion, success expected
This library exists to make fallible numeric type conversions easy, without
resorting to the as
keyword.
Conv
is likeFrom
, but supports fallible conversionsCast
is toConv
whatInto
is toFrom
ConvApprox
andCastApprox
support fallible, approximate conversionConvFloat
andCastFloat
are similar, providing precise control over rounding
If you are wondering "why not just use as
", there are a few reasons:
- integer conversions may silently truncate or sign-extend which does not preserve value
- prior to Rust 1.45.0 float-to-int conversions were not fully defined; since this version they use saturating conversion (NaN converts to 0)
- you want some assurance (at least in debug builds) that the conversion will preserve values correctly
Why might you not want to use this library?
- You want saturating / truncating / other non-value-preserving conversion
- You want to convert non-numeric types (
From
supports a lot more conversions thanConv
does)! - You want a thoroughly tested library (we're not quite there yet)
Error handling
All traits support two methods:
try_*
methods return aResult
and always fail if the correct conversion is not possible- other methods may panic or return incorrect results
In debug builds, methods not returning Result
must panic on failure. As
with the overflow checks on Rust's standard integer arithmetic, this is
considered a tool for finding logic errors. In release builds, these methods
are permitted to return defined but incorrect results similar to the as
keyword.
If the always_assert
feature flag is set, assertions will be turned on in
all builds. Some additional feature flags are available for finer-grained
control (see Cargo.toml
).
Performance
Performance is "good enough that it hasn't been a concern".
In debug builds and when always_assert
is enabled, the priority is testing
but overhead should be small.
In release builds without always_assert
, conv*
methods should reduce to
x as T
(with necessary additions for rounding).
no_std support
When the crate's default features are disabled (and std
is not enabled)
then the library supports no_std
. In this case, ConvFloat
and
CastFloat
are only available if the libm
optional dependency is
enabled.
MSRV and no_std
The Minumum Supported Rust Version is 1.53.0 (IntoIterator for [T; N]
).
By default, std
support is required. With default features disabled no_std
is supported, but the ConvFloat
and CastFloat
traits are unavailable.
Enabling the libm
feature will re-enable these traits.
Copyright and Licence
The COPYRIGHT file includes a list of contributors who claim copyright on this project. This list may be incomplete; new contributors may optionally add themselves to this list.
The easy-cast library is published under the terms of the Apache License, Version 2.0. You may obtain a copy of this licence from the LICENSE file or on the following webpage: https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Dependencies
~98KB