| // Copyright 2014 The Rust Project Developers. See the COPYRIGHT |
| // file at the top-level directory of this distribution and at |
| // http://rust-lang.org/COPYRIGHT. |
| // |
| // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 <LICENSE-APACHE or |
| // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT license |
| // <LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>, at your |
| // option. This file may not be copied, modified, or distributed |
| // except according to those terms. |
| |
| //! Standard library macros |
| //! |
| //! This modules contains a set of macros which are exported from the standard |
| //! library. Each macro is available for use when linking against the standard |
| //! library. |
| |
| /// The entry point for panic of Rust threads. |
| /// |
| /// This allows a program to to terminate immediately and provide feedback |
| /// to the caller of the program. `panic!` should be used when a program reaches |
| /// an unrecoverable problem. |
| /// |
| /// This macro is the perfect way to assert conditions in example code and in |
| /// tests. `panic!` is closely tied with the `unwrap` method of both [`Option`] |
| /// and [`Result`][runwrap] enums. Both implementations call `panic!` when they are set |
| /// to None or Err variants. |
| /// |
| /// This macro is used to inject panic into a Rust thread, causing the thread to |
| /// panic entirely. Each thread's panic can be reaped as the `Box<Any>` type, |
| /// and the single-argument form of the `panic!` macro will be the value which |
| /// is transmitted. |
| /// |
| /// [`Result`] enum is often a better solution for recovering from errors than |
| /// using the `panic!` macro. This macro should be used to avoid proceeding using |
| /// incorrect values, such as from external sources. Detailed information about |
| /// error handling is found in the [book]. |
| /// |
| /// The multi-argument form of this macro panics with a string and has the |
| /// [`format!`] syntax for building a string. |
| /// |
| /// See also the macro [`compile_error!`], for raising errors during compilation. |
| /// |
| /// [runwrap]: ../std/result/enum.Result.html#method.unwrap |
| /// [`Option`]: ../std/option/enum.Option.html#method.unwrap |
| /// [`Result`]: ../std/result/enum.Result.html |
| /// [`format!`]: ../std/macro.format.html |
| /// [`compile_error!`]: ../std/macro.compile_error.html |
| /// [book]: ../book/second-edition/ch09-01-unrecoverable-errors-with-panic.html |
| /// |
| /// # Current implementation |
| /// |
| /// If the main thread panics it will terminate all your threads and end your |
| /// program with code `101`. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ```should_panic |
| /// # #![allow(unreachable_code)] |
| /// panic!(); |
| /// panic!("this is a terrible mistake!"); |
| /// panic!(4); // panic with the value of 4 to be collected elsewhere |
| /// panic!("this is a {} {message}", "fancy", message = "message"); |
| /// ``` |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable] |
| macro_rules! panic { |
| () => ({ |
| panic!("explicit panic") |
| }); |
| ($msg:expr) => ({ |
| $crate::rt::begin_panic($msg, &(file!(), line!(), __rust_unstable_column!())) |
| }); |
| ($msg:expr,) => ({ |
| panic!($msg) |
| }); |
| ($fmt:expr, $($arg:tt)+) => ({ |
| $crate::rt::begin_panic_fmt(&format_args!($fmt, $($arg)+), |
| &(file!(), line!(), __rust_unstable_column!())) |
| }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Macro for printing to the standard output. |
| /// |
| /// Equivalent to the [`println!`] macro except that a newline is not printed at |
| /// the end of the message. |
| /// |
| /// Note that stdout is frequently line-buffered by default so it may be |
| /// necessary to use [`io::stdout().flush()`][flush] to ensure the output is emitted |
| /// immediately. |
| /// |
| /// Use `print!` only for the primary output of your program. Use |
| /// [`eprint!`] instead to print error and progress messages. |
| /// |
| /// [`println!`]: ../std/macro.println.html |
| /// [flush]: ../std/io/trait.Write.html#tymethod.flush |
| /// [`eprint!`]: ../std/macro.eprint.html |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// Panics if writing to `io::stdout()` fails. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use std::io::{self, Write}; |
| /// |
| /// print!("this "); |
| /// print!("will "); |
| /// print!("be "); |
| /// print!("on "); |
| /// print!("the "); |
| /// print!("same "); |
| /// print!("line "); |
| /// |
| /// io::stdout().flush().unwrap(); |
| /// |
| /// print!("this string has a newline, why not choose println! instead?\n"); |
| /// |
| /// io::stdout().flush().unwrap(); |
| /// ``` |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable] |
| macro_rules! print { |
| ($($arg:tt)*) => ($crate::io::_print(format_args!($($arg)*))); |
| } |
| |
| /// Macro for printing to the standard output, with a newline. |
| /// |
| /// On all platforms, the newline is the LINE FEED character (`\n`/`U+000A`) alone |
| /// (no additional CARRIAGE RETURN (`\r`/`U+000D`). |
| /// |
| /// Use the [`format!`] syntax to write data to the standard output. |
| /// See [`std::fmt`] for more information. |
| /// |
| /// Use `println!` only for the primary output of your program. Use |
| /// [`eprintln!`] instead to print error and progress messages. |
| /// |
| /// [`format!`]: ../std/macro.format.html |
| /// [`std::fmt`]: ../std/fmt/index.html |
| /// [`eprintln!`]: ../std/macro.eprint.html |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// Panics if writing to `io::stdout` fails. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// println!(); // prints just a newline |
| /// println!("hello there!"); |
| /// println!("format {} arguments", "some"); |
| /// ``` |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable] |
| macro_rules! println { |
| () => (print!("\n")); |
| ($($arg:tt)*) => ({ |
| $crate::io::_print(format_args_nl!($($arg)*)); |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// Macro for printing to the standard error. |
| /// |
| /// Equivalent to the [`print!`] macro, except that output goes to |
| /// [`io::stderr`] instead of `io::stdout`. See [`print!`] for |
| /// example usage. |
| /// |
| /// Use `eprint!` only for error and progress messages. Use `print!` |
| /// instead for the primary output of your program. |
| /// |
| /// [`io::stderr`]: ../std/io/struct.Stderr.html |
| /// [`print!`]: ../std/macro.print.html |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// Panics if writing to `io::stderr` fails. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// eprint!("Error: Could not complete task"); |
| /// ``` |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[stable(feature = "eprint", since = "1.19.0")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable] |
| macro_rules! eprint { |
| ($($arg:tt)*) => ($crate::io::_eprint(format_args!($($arg)*))); |
| } |
| |
| /// Macro for printing to the standard error, with a newline. |
| /// |
| /// Equivalent to the [`println!`] macro, except that output goes to |
| /// [`io::stderr`] instead of `io::stdout`. See [`println!`] for |
| /// example usage. |
| /// |
| /// Use `eprintln!` only for error and progress messages. Use `println!` |
| /// instead for the primary output of your program. |
| /// |
| /// [`io::stderr`]: ../std/io/struct.Stderr.html |
| /// [`println!`]: ../std/macro.println.html |
| /// |
| /// # Panics |
| /// |
| /// Panics if writing to `io::stderr` fails. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// eprintln!("Error: Could not complete task"); |
| /// ``` |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[stable(feature = "eprint", since = "1.19.0")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable] |
| macro_rules! eprintln { |
| () => (eprint!("\n")); |
| ($($arg:tt)*) => ({ |
| $crate::io::_eprint(format_args_nl!($($arg)*)); |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[unstable(feature = "await_macro", issue = "50547")] |
| #[allow_internal_unstable] |
| #[allow_internal_unsafe] |
| macro_rules! await { |
| ($e:expr) => { { |
| let mut pinned = $e; |
| loop { |
| if let $crate::task::Poll::Ready(x) = |
| $crate::future::poll_in_task_cx(unsafe { |
| $crate::mem::PinMut::new_unchecked(&mut pinned) |
| }) |
| { |
| break x; |
| } |
| // FIXME(cramertj) prior to stabilizing await, we have to ensure that this |
| // can't be used to create a generator on stable via `|| await!()`. |
| yield |
| } |
| } } |
| } |
| |
| /// A macro to select an event from a number of receivers. |
| /// |
| /// This macro is used to wait for the first event to occur on a number of |
| /// receivers. It places no restrictions on the types of receivers given to |
| /// this macro, this can be viewed as a heterogeneous select. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// #![feature(mpsc_select)] |
| /// |
| /// use std::thread; |
| /// use std::sync::mpsc; |
| /// |
| /// // two placeholder functions for now |
| /// fn long_running_thread() {} |
| /// fn calculate_the_answer() -> u32 { 42 } |
| /// |
| /// let (tx1, rx1) = mpsc::channel(); |
| /// let (tx2, rx2) = mpsc::channel(); |
| /// |
| /// thread::spawn(move|| { long_running_thread(); tx1.send(()).unwrap(); }); |
| /// thread::spawn(move|| { tx2.send(calculate_the_answer()).unwrap(); }); |
| /// |
| /// select! { |
| /// _ = rx1.recv() => println!("the long running thread finished first"), |
| /// answer = rx2.recv() => { |
| /// println!("the answer was: {}", answer.unwrap()); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// # drop(rx1.recv()); |
| /// # drop(rx2.recv()); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// For more information about select, see the `std::sync::mpsc::Select` structure. |
| #[macro_export] |
| #[unstable(feature = "mpsc_select", issue = "27800")] |
| macro_rules! select { |
| ( |
| $($name:pat = $rx:ident.$meth:ident() => $code:expr),+ |
| ) => ({ |
| use $crate::sync::mpsc::Select; |
| let sel = Select::new(); |
| $( let mut $rx = sel.handle(&$rx); )+ |
| unsafe { |
| $( $rx.add(); )+ |
| } |
| let ret = sel.wait(); |
| $( if ret == $rx.id() { let $name = $rx.$meth(); $code } else )+ |
| { unreachable!() } |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| #[cfg(test)] |
| macro_rules! assert_approx_eq { |
| ($a:expr, $b:expr) => ({ |
| let (a, b) = (&$a, &$b); |
| assert!((*a - *b).abs() < 1.0e-6, |
| "{} is not approximately equal to {}", *a, *b); |
| }) |
| } |
| |
| /// Built-in macros to the compiler itself. |
| /// |
| /// These macros do not have any corresponding definition with a `macro_rules!` |
| /// macro, but are documented here. Their implementations can be found hardcoded |
| /// into libsyntax itself. |
| #[cfg(dox)] |
| mod builtin { |
| |
| /// Unconditionally causes compilation to fail with the given error message when encountered. |
| /// |
| /// This macro should be used when a crate uses a conditional compilation strategy to provide |
| /// better error messages for erroneous conditions. It's the compiler-level form of [`panic!`], |
| /// which emits an error at *runtime*, rather than during compilation. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// Two such examples are macros and `#[cfg]` environments. |
| /// |
| /// Emit better compiler error if a macro is passed invalid values. Without the final branch, |
| /// the compiler would still emit an error, but the error's message would not mention the two |
| /// valid values. |
| /// |
| /// ```compile_fail |
| /// macro_rules! give_me_foo_or_bar { |
| /// (foo) => {}; |
| /// (bar) => {}; |
| /// ($x:ident) => { |
| /// compile_error!("This macro only accepts `foo` or `bar`"); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// give_me_foo_or_bar!(neither); |
| /// // ^ will fail at compile time with message "This macro only accepts `foo` or `bar`" |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Emit compiler error if one of a number of features isn't available. |
| /// |
| /// ```compile_fail |
| /// #[cfg(not(any(feature = "foo", feature = "bar")))] |
| /// compile_error!("Either feature \"foo\" or \"bar\" must be enabled for this crate.") |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// [`panic!`]: ../std/macro.panic.html |
| #[stable(feature = "compile_error_macro", since = "1.20.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! compile_error { |
| ($msg:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($msg:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// The core macro for formatted string creation & output. |
| /// |
| /// This macro functions by taking a formatting string literal containing |
| /// `{}` for each additional argument passed. `format_args!` prepares the |
| /// additional parameters to ensure the output can be interpreted as a string |
| /// and canonicalizes the arguments into a single type. Any value that implements |
| /// the [`Display`] trait can be passed to `format_args!`, as can any |
| /// [`Debug`] implementation be passed to a `{:?}` within the formatting string. |
| /// |
| /// This macro produces a value of type [`fmt::Arguments`]. This value can be |
| /// passed to the macros within [`std::fmt`] for performing useful redirection. |
| /// All other formatting macros ([`format!`], [`write!`], [`println!`], etc) are |
| /// proxied through this one. `format_args!`, unlike its derived macros, avoids |
| /// heap allocations. |
| /// |
| /// You can use the [`fmt::Arguments`] value that `format_args!` returns |
| /// in `Debug` and `Display` contexts as seen below. The example also shows |
| /// that `Debug` and `Display` format to the same thing: the interpolated |
| /// format string in `format_args!`. |
| /// |
| /// ```rust |
| /// let debug = format!("{:?}", format_args!("{} foo {:?}", 1, 2)); |
| /// let display = format!("{}", format_args!("{} foo {:?}", 1, 2)); |
| /// assert_eq!("1 foo 2", display); |
| /// assert_eq!(display, debug); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// For more information, see the documentation in [`std::fmt`]. |
| /// |
| /// [`Display`]: ../std/fmt/trait.Display.html |
| /// [`Debug`]: ../std/fmt/trait.Debug.html |
| /// [`fmt::Arguments`]: ../std/fmt/struct.Arguments.html |
| /// [`std::fmt`]: ../std/fmt/index.html |
| /// [`format!`]: ../std/macro.format.html |
| /// [`write!`]: ../std/macro.write.html |
| /// [`println!`]: ../std/macro.println.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// use std::fmt; |
| /// |
| /// let s = fmt::format(format_args!("hello {}", "world")); |
| /// assert_eq!(s, format!("hello {}", "world")); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! format_args { |
| ($fmt:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($fmt:expr, $($args:tt)*) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Inspect an environment variable at compile time. |
| /// |
| /// This macro will expand to the value of the named environment variable at |
| /// compile time, yielding an expression of type `&'static str`. |
| /// |
| /// If the environment variable is not defined, then a compilation error |
| /// will be emitted. To not emit a compile error, use the [`option_env!`] |
| /// macro instead. |
| /// |
| /// [`option_env!`]: ../std/macro.option_env.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let path: &'static str = env!("PATH"); |
| /// println!("the $PATH variable at the time of compiling was: {}", path); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// You can customize the error message by passing a string as the second |
| /// parameter: |
| /// |
| /// ```compile_fail |
| /// let doc: &'static str = env!("documentation", "what's that?!"); |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// If the `documentation` environment variable is not defined, you'll get |
| /// the following error: |
| /// |
| /// ```text |
| /// error: what's that?! |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! env { |
| ($name:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($name:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Optionally inspect an environment variable at compile time. |
| /// |
| /// If the named environment variable is present at compile time, this will |
| /// expand into an expression of type `Option<&'static str>` whose value is |
| /// `Some` of the value of the environment variable. If the environment |
| /// variable is not present, then this will expand to `None`. See |
| /// [`Option<T>`][option] for more information on this type. |
| /// |
| /// A compile time error is never emitted when using this macro regardless |
| /// of whether the environment variable is present or not. |
| /// |
| /// [option]: ../std/option/enum.Option.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let key: Option<&'static str> = option_env!("SECRET_KEY"); |
| /// println!("the secret key might be: {:?}", key); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! option_env { |
| ($name:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($name:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Concatenate identifiers into one identifier. |
| /// |
| /// This macro takes any number of comma-separated identifiers, and |
| /// concatenates them all into one, yielding an expression which is a new |
| /// identifier. Note that hygiene makes it such that this macro cannot |
| /// capture local variables. Also, as a general rule, macros are only |
| /// allowed in item, statement or expression position. That means while |
| /// you may use this macro for referring to existing variables, functions or |
| /// modules etc, you cannot define a new one with it. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// #![feature(concat_idents)] |
| /// |
| /// # fn main() { |
| /// fn foobar() -> u32 { 23 } |
| /// |
| /// let f = concat_idents!(foo, bar); |
| /// println!("{}", f()); |
| /// |
| /// // fn concat_idents!(new, fun, name) { } // not usable in this way! |
| /// # } |
| /// ``` |
| #[unstable(feature = "concat_idents_macro", issue = "29599")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! concat_idents { |
| ($($e:ident),+) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($($e:ident,)+) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Concatenates literals into a static string slice. |
| /// |
| /// This macro takes any number of comma-separated literals, yielding an |
| /// expression of type `&'static str` which represents all of the literals |
| /// concatenated left-to-right. |
| /// |
| /// Integer and floating point literals are stringified in order to be |
| /// concatenated. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let s = concat!("test", 10, 'b', true); |
| /// assert_eq!(s, "test10btrue"); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! concat { |
| ($($e:expr),*) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($($e:expr,)*) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// A macro which expands to the line number on which it was invoked. |
| /// |
| /// With [`column!`] and [`file!`], these macros provide debugging information for |
| /// developers about the location within the source. |
| /// |
| /// The expanded expression has type `u32` and is 1-based, so the first line |
| /// in each file evaluates to 1, the second to 2, etc. This is consistent |
| /// with error messages by common compilers or popular editors. |
| /// The returned line is *not necessarily* the line of the `line!` invocation itself, |
| /// but rather the first macro invocation leading up to the invocation |
| /// of the `line!` macro. |
| /// |
| /// [`column!`]: macro.column.html |
| /// [`file!`]: macro.file.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let current_line = line!(); |
| /// println!("defined on line: {}", current_line); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! line { () => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }) } |
| |
| /// A macro which expands to the column number on which it was invoked. |
| /// |
| /// With [`line!`] and [`file!`], these macros provide debugging information for |
| /// developers about the location within the source. |
| /// |
| /// The expanded expression has type `u32` and is 1-based, so the first column |
| /// in each line evaluates to 1, the second to 2, etc. This is consistent |
| /// with error messages by common compilers or popular editors. |
| /// The returned column is *not necessarily* the line of the `column!` invocation itself, |
| /// but rather the first macro invocation leading up to the invocation |
| /// of the `column!` macro. |
| /// |
| /// [`line!`]: macro.line.html |
| /// [`file!`]: macro.file.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let current_col = column!(); |
| /// println!("defined on column: {}", current_col); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! column { () => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }) } |
| |
| /// A macro which expands to the file name from which it was invoked. |
| /// |
| /// With [`line!`] and [`column!`], these macros provide debugging information for |
| /// developers about the location within the source. |
| /// |
| /// |
| /// The expanded expression has type `&'static str`, and the returned file |
| /// is not the invocation of the `file!` macro itself, but rather the |
| /// first macro invocation leading up to the invocation of the `file!` |
| /// macro. |
| /// |
| /// [`line!`]: macro.line.html |
| /// [`column!`]: macro.column.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let this_file = file!(); |
| /// println!("defined in file: {}", this_file); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! file { () => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }) } |
| |
| /// A macro which stringifies its arguments. |
| /// |
| /// This macro will yield an expression of type `&'static str` which is the |
| /// stringification of all the tokens passed to the macro. No restrictions |
| /// are placed on the syntax of the macro invocation itself. |
| /// |
| /// Note that the expanded results of the input tokens may change in the |
| /// future. You should be careful if you rely on the output. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let one_plus_one = stringify!(1 + 1); |
| /// assert_eq!(one_plus_one, "1 + 1"); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! stringify { ($($t:tt)*) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }) } |
| |
| /// Includes a utf8-encoded file as a string. |
| /// |
| /// The file is located relative to the current file. (similarly to how |
| /// modules are found) |
| /// |
| /// This macro will yield an expression of type `&'static str` which is the |
| /// contents of the file. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// Assume there are two files in the same directory with the following |
| /// contents: |
| /// |
| /// File 'spanish.in': |
| /// |
| /// ```text |
| /// adiรณs |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// File 'main.rs': |
| /// |
| /// ```ignore (cannot-doctest-external-file-dependency) |
| /// fn main() { |
| /// let my_str = include_str!("spanish.in"); |
| /// assert_eq!(my_str, "adiรณs\n"); |
| /// print!("{}", my_str); |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Compiling 'main.rs' and running the resulting binary will print "adiรณs". |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! include_str { |
| ($file:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($file:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Includes a file as a reference to a byte array. |
| /// |
| /// The file is located relative to the current file. (similarly to how |
| /// modules are found) |
| /// |
| /// This macro will yield an expression of type `&'static [u8; N]` which is |
| /// the contents of the file. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// Assume there are two files in the same directory with the following |
| /// contents: |
| /// |
| /// File 'spanish.in': |
| /// |
| /// ```text |
| /// adiรณs |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// File 'main.rs': |
| /// |
| /// ```ignore (cannot-doctest-external-file-dependency) |
| /// fn main() { |
| /// let bytes = include_bytes!("spanish.in"); |
| /// assert_eq!(bytes, b"adi\xc3\xb3s\n"); |
| /// print!("{}", String::from_utf8_lossy(bytes)); |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Compiling 'main.rs' and running the resulting binary will print "adiรณs". |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! include_bytes { |
| ($file:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($file:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Expands to a string that represents the current module path. |
| /// |
| /// The current module path can be thought of as the hierarchy of modules |
| /// leading back up to the crate root. The first component of the path |
| /// returned is the name of the crate currently being compiled. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// mod test { |
| /// pub fn foo() { |
| /// assert!(module_path!().ends_with("test")); |
| /// } |
| /// } |
| /// |
| /// test::foo(); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! module_path { () => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }) } |
| |
| /// Boolean evaluation of configuration flags, at compile-time. |
| /// |
| /// In addition to the `#[cfg]` attribute, this macro is provided to allow |
| /// boolean expression evaluation of configuration flags. This frequently |
| /// leads to less duplicated code. |
| /// |
| /// The syntax given to this macro is the same syntax as [the `cfg` |
| /// attribute](../book/first-edition/conditional-compilation.html). |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// let my_directory = if cfg!(windows) { |
| /// "windows-specific-directory" |
| /// } else { |
| /// "unix-directory" |
| /// }; |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! cfg { ($($cfg:tt)*) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }) } |
| |
| /// Parse a file as an expression or an item according to the context. |
| /// |
| /// The file is located relative to the current file (similarly to how |
| /// modules are found). |
| /// |
| /// Using this macro is often a bad idea, because if the file is |
| /// parsed as an expression, it is going to be placed in the |
| /// surrounding code unhygienically. This could result in variables |
| /// or functions being different from what the file expected if |
| /// there are variables or functions that have the same name in |
| /// the current file. |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// Assume there are two files in the same directory with the following |
| /// contents: |
| /// |
| /// File 'monkeys.in': |
| /// |
| /// ```ignore (only-for-syntax-highlight) |
| /// ['๐', '๐', '๐'] |
| /// .iter() |
| /// .cycle() |
| /// .take(6) |
| /// .collect::<String>() |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// File 'main.rs': |
| /// |
| /// ```ignore (cannot-doctest-external-file-dependency) |
| /// fn main() { |
| /// let my_string = include!("monkeys.in"); |
| /// assert_eq!("๐๐๐๐๐๐", my_string); |
| /// println!("{}", my_string); |
| /// } |
| /// ``` |
| /// |
| /// Compiling 'main.rs' and running the resulting binary will print |
| /// "๐๐๐๐๐๐". |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! include { |
| ($file:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($file:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| |
| /// Ensure that a boolean expression is `true` at runtime. |
| /// |
| /// This will invoke the [`panic!`] macro if the provided expression cannot be |
| /// evaluated to `true` at runtime. |
| /// |
| /// # Uses |
| /// |
| /// Assertions are always checked in both debug and release builds, and cannot |
| /// be disabled. See [`debug_assert!`] for assertions that are not enabled in |
| /// release builds by default. |
| /// |
| /// Unsafe code relies on `assert!` to enforce run-time invariants that, if |
| /// violated could lead to unsafety. |
| /// |
| /// Other use-cases of `assert!` include [testing] and enforcing run-time |
| /// invariants in safe code (whose violation cannot result in unsafety). |
| /// |
| /// # Custom Messages |
| /// |
| /// This macro has a second form, where a custom panic message can |
| /// be provided with or without arguments for formatting. See [`std::fmt`] |
| /// for syntax for this form. |
| /// |
| /// [`panic!`]: macro.panic.html |
| /// [`debug_assert!`]: macro.debug_assert.html |
| /// [testing]: ../book/second-edition/ch11-01-writing-tests.html#checking-results-with-the-assert-macro |
| /// [`std::fmt`]: ../std/fmt/index.html |
| /// |
| /// # Examples |
| /// |
| /// ``` |
| /// // the panic message for these assertions is the stringified value of the |
| /// // expression given. |
| /// assert!(true); |
| /// |
| /// fn some_computation() -> bool { true } // a very simple function |
| /// |
| /// assert!(some_computation()); |
| /// |
| /// // assert with a custom message |
| /// let x = true; |
| /// assert!(x, "x wasn't true!"); |
| /// |
| /// let a = 3; let b = 27; |
| /// assert!(a + b == 30, "a = {}, b = {}", a, b); |
| /// ``` |
| #[stable(feature = "rust1", since = "1.0.0")] |
| #[rustc_doc_only_macro] |
| macro_rules! assert { |
| ($cond:expr) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($cond:expr,) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| ($cond:expr, $($arg:tt)+) => ({ /* compiler built-in */ }); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// A macro for defining `#[cfg]` if-else statements. |
| /// |
| /// This is similar to the `if/elif` C preprocessor macro by allowing definition |
| /// of a cascade of `#[cfg]` cases, emitting the implementation which matches |
| /// first. |
| /// |
| /// This allows you to conveniently provide a long list `#[cfg]`'d blocks of code |
| /// without having to rewrite each clause multiple times. |
| macro_rules! cfg_if { |
| ($( |
| if #[cfg($($meta:meta),*)] { $($it:item)* } |
| ) else * else { |
| $($it2:item)* |
| }) => { |
| __cfg_if_items! { |
| () ; |
| $( ( ($($meta),*) ($($it)*) ), )* |
| ( () ($($it2)*) ), |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| macro_rules! __cfg_if_items { |
| (($($not:meta,)*) ; ) => {}; |
| (($($not:meta,)*) ; ( ($($m:meta),*) ($($it:item)*) ), $($rest:tt)*) => { |
| __cfg_if_apply! { cfg(all(not(any($($not),*)), $($m,)*)), $($it)* } |
| __cfg_if_items! { ($($not,)* $($m,)*) ; $($rest)* } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| macro_rules! __cfg_if_apply { |
| ($m:meta, $($it:item)*) => { |
| $(#[$m] $it)* |
| } |
| } |