#markdown #model #data-model #macro #generate #name #enums

macro mdmodels-macro

A procedural macro for generating models from a markdown data model

2 releases

0.1.1 Sep 23, 2024
0.1.0 Jul 1, 2024

#102 in #data-model


Used in enzymeml

MIT license

15KB
214 lines

MD-Models Macro

Build Status

This macro can be used to convert a markdown model using MD-Models into Rust structs and enums. The resulting Rust code can be used to serialize and deserialize the model and integrate it into your Rust project.

Installation

cargo install mdmodels-macro

Example

Suppose you have a markdown file model.md with the following content:

# Test

### Object

- string_value
  - Type: string
- enum_value
  - Type: SomeEnum

### SomeEnum

```python
VALUE = value
ANOTHER = another
```

You can convert this markdown file into Rust code using the following command:

use mdmodels_macro::parse_mdmodel;

parse_mdmodel!("tests/data/model.md");

At this point, the macro will generate the corresponding structs and enums in Rust code, which will be available as a module. The module name is derived from the title (# Test) as snake case, if present. Otherwise the module name will be model.

You can then use the module in your code:

Non-builder pattern

fn main () {
    let obj = test::Object {
        string_value: "Hello, World!".to_string(),
        enum_value: model::SomeEnum::VALUE,
    };

    // Serialize the object
    let serialized = serde_json::to_string(&obj).unwrap();

    println!("Serialized: \n{}\n", serialized);

    // Deserialize the object
    let deserialized: test::Object = serde_json::from_str(&serialized).unwrap();

    println!("Deserialized: \n{:#?}\n", deserialized);
}

Builder pattern

This macro also supports the builder pattern. To use the builder pattern, you need to use the Builder struct of the object in the markdown file:

fn main () -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
    let obj = test::ObjectBuilder::new()
        .string_value("Hello, World!")
        .enum_value(model::SomeEnum::VALUE)
        .build()?;

    // Serialize the object
    let serialized = serde_json::to_string(&obj).unwrap();

    println!("Serialized: \n{}\n", serialized);

    // Deserialize the object
    let deserialized: test::Object = serde_json::from_str(&serialized).unwrap();

    println!("Deserialized: \n{:#?}\n", deserialized);

    Ok(())
}

Dependencies

~16–34MB
~486K SLoC