1 stable release
2.0.0 | Oct 14, 2022 |
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#423 in Testing
37KB
805 lines
read_lines_into Rust crate
Read lines (from Path, File, BufRead) into a struct (String, Vec).
Example:
// Choose any existing text file
let path = Path::new("example.txt");
// Read lines from the path's file into a string
let string = path.read_lines_into_string().unwrap();
// Read lines from the path's file into a vector of strings
let strings = path.read_lines_into_vec_string().unwrap();
Install
Add dependency:
[dependencies]
read_lines_into = "*"
Notes
These functions deliberately preserve line endings,
which are \n
newlines and \r
carriage returns.
These functions use buffered readers for efficiency.
These functions are written to be easy to understand, so you can copy them into your own code if you wish.
If you're reading very large files, then you may prefer to write your own code to process each line as it's read.
Line endings using LF and CRLF
Unix systems typically end text lines with \n
LINE FEED (LF).
Windows systems typically end text lines with \r
CARRIAGE RETURN (CR)
then and \n
LINE FEED (LF).
FAQ
Why use this instead of the Rust BufRead lines()
function?
Because we have use cases where we must preserve line endings.
Why publish this as a crate?
Because we want to make it easy to use, and easy to show as examples for developers who are learning how to program using Rust.
What are alternatives to consider?
Rust std::io::BufRead
and its function lines()
.
Rust std::include_str
and its macro include_string!
.
Rust crate load_file
and its macro load_str!
.
Rust std::fs::read_to_string(file_name).unwrap().lines()
.
Tracking
- Project: read-lines-into-rust-crate
- Version: 1.0.0
- Created: 2022-10-01T22:58:34Z
- Updated: 2022-10-14T01:07:18Z
- Website: https://github.com/sixarm/read-lines-into-rust-crate
- Contact: Joel Parker Henderson joel@joelparkerhenderson.com
- License: MIT OR Apache-2.0 OR GPL-2.0 OR GPL-3.0