22 releases
0.12.0 | Sep 13, 2024 |
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0.11.1 | Feb 27, 2024 |
0.10.0 | Jun 9, 2023 |
#526 in Parser implementations
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Toml Example
A lib help generate toml example
Introduction
This crate provides the TomlExample
trait and an accompanying derive macro.
Deriving TomlExample
on a struct will provide to_example
function help generate toml example file base documentation
- support
#[serde(default)]
,#[serde(default = "function_name")]
attributes (serde
feature, opt-in) - support
#[serde(rename)]
,#[serde(rename_all = "renaming rules")]
, the renaming rules can belowercase
,UPPERCASE
,PascalCase
,camelCase
,snake_case
,SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE
,kebab-case
,SCREAMING-KEBAB-CASE
- provide
#[toml_example(default)]
,#[toml_example(default = 0)]
,#[toml_example(default = "default_string")]
attributes - The order matter of attribute macro, if
#[serde(default = ..]
and#[toml_example(default = ..)]
existing at the same time with different value
Quick Example
use toml_example::TomlExample;
/// Config is to arrange something or change the controls on a computer or other device
/// so that it can be used in a particular way
#[derive(TomlExample)]
struct Config {
/// Config.a should be a number
a: usize,
/// Config.b should be a string
b: String,
/// Optional Config.c is a number
c: Option<usize>,
/// Config.d is a list of number
d: Vec<usize>,
/// Config.e should be a number
#[serde(default = "default_int")]
e: usize,
/// Config.f should be a string
#[serde(default = "default_str")]
f: String,
/// Config.g should be a number
#[toml_example(default =7)]
g: usize,
/// Config.f should be a string
#[toml_example(default = "seven")]
h: String,
}
fn default_int() -> usize {
7
}
fn default_str() -> String {
"seven".into()
}
Config::to_toml_example("example.toml"); // write example to a file
let example = Config::toml_example();
Toml example base on the doc string of each field
# Config is to arrange something or change the controls on a computer or other device
# so that it can be used in a particular way
# Config.a should be a number
a = 0
# Config.b should be a string
b = ""
# Optional Config.c is a number
# c = 0
# Config.d is a list of number
# d = [ 0, ]
# Config.e should be a number
e = 7
# Config.f should be a string
f = "seven"
# Config.g should be a number
g = 7
# Config.h should be a string
h = "seven"
Nesting Struct
A nesting struct wrap with Option<T>
, Vec<T>
, HashMap<String, T>
, BTreeMap<String, T>
are handled.
Please add #[toml_example(nesting)]
, or #[toml_example(nesting = prefix)]
on the field.
#[toml_example(nesting)]
/// Service with specific port
#[derive(TomlExample)]
struct Service {
/// port should be a number
#[toml_example(default = 80)]
port: usize,
}
#[derive(TomlExample)]
#[allow(dead_code)]
struct Node {
/// Services are running in the node
#[toml_example(nesting)]
#[toml_example(default = http)]
services: HashMap<String, Service>,
}
Node::toml_example()
will be following string.
# Services are running in the node
# Service with specific port
[services.http]
# port should be a number
port = 80
If you want an optional field become a required field in example,
place the #[toml_example(require)]
on the field.
If you want to skip some field you can use #[toml_example(skip)]
,
the #[serde(skip)]
, #[serde(skip_deserializing)]
also works.
use toml_example::TomlExample;
#[derive(TomlExample)]
struct Config {
/// Config.a is an optional number
#[toml_example(require)]
a: Option<usize>,
/// Config.b is an optional string
#[toml_example(require)]
b: Option<String>,
#[toml_example(require)]
#[toml_example(default = "third")]
c: Option<String>,
#[toml_example(skip)]
d: usize,
}
# Config.a is an optional number
a = 0
# Config.b is an optional string
b = ""
c = "third"
Dependencies
~295–750KB
~17K SLoC