Expand description
§Power Letters for Rust
Concise spellings of common Rust operations:
C-CloneO-ToOwnedS-ToStringI- IgnoreResultX-expectforResultandOption
All operations are provided as both functions and methods. Sometimes one reads better than the other.
§Power Clone
use powerletters::*;
let bagostuff = vec!["a", "b", "c"];
let newbag = bagostuff.C();
// or
let newbag = C(&bagostuff);§Power ToOwned
use powerletters::*;
use std::path::Path;
let yourpath = Path::new("chill");
let mypath = yourpath.O();
// or
let mypath = O(yourpath);§Power ToString
use powerletters::*;
let s: String = S("foo");
// or
let s: String = "foo".S();§Power ignore Result - kick that Result to the curb!
use powerletters::*;
use std::io::Write;
let mut buf = Vec::new();
write!(&mut buf, "hello").I();
// or
I(write!(&mut buf, "world"));Note this is superior to let _ = ...
because the let version is untyped and can
introduce unintended bugs like ignoring futures.
§Power expect for Result and Option.
use powerletters::*;
let maybe_thing = Some("thing");
let thing = maybe_thing.X(); // like `.expect("some baloney")`
let good_thing: Result<_, io::Error> = Ok("thing");
let thing = good_thing.X();
// or
let maybe_thing = Some("thing");
let thing = X(maybe_thing);
let good_thing: Result<_, io::Error> = Ok("thing");
let thing = X(good_thing);Traits§
- Power
Clone - Power
Clone. - Power
Expect - Power
expectforResultandOption. - Power
ToOwned - Power
ToOwned. - Power
ToString - Power
ToString. - Result
Ignore - Power ignore
Result- kick thatResultto the curb!