This crate provides two types of bounded integer.
The bounded_integer! macro allows you to define your own bounded integer type, given a
specific (inclusive) range it inhabits. For example:
bounded_integer! {
struct MyInteger(0, 7);
}
let num = MyInteger::new(5).unwrap();
assert_eq!(num, 5);This macro supports both structs and enums. See the examples module for the
documentation of generated types.
You can also create ad-hoc bounded integers via types in this library that use const generics, for example:
let num = <BoundedU8<0, 7>>::new(5).unwrap();
assert_eq!(num, 5);These integers are shorter to use as they don't require a type declaration or explicit name.
However due to the limits of const generics, they may not implement some traits –
namely [Default], bytemuck’s Zeroable and zerocopy’s FromZeros.
Also, unlike their macro counterparts they will not be subject to niche layout optimizations.
All the integers in this crate depend only on libcore and so work in #![no_std] environments.
By default, no crate features are enabled.
std: Interopate withstd— impliesalloc. Enables the following things:- An implementation of
ErrorforParseError.
- An implementation of
alloc: Interopate withalloc. Has no effect currently.macro: Enable thebounded_integer!macro.arbitrary1: ImplementArbitraryfor the bounded integers. This is useful when using bounded integers as fuzzing inputs.bytemuck1: ImplementContiguousandNoUninitfor all bounded integers, andZeroablefor macro-generated bounded integers that support it.num-traits02: ImplementBounded,AsPrimitive,FromPrimitive,NumCast,ToPrimitive,CheckedAdd,CheckedDiv,CheckedMul,CheckedNeg,CheckedRem,CheckedSub,MulAdd,SaturatingAdd,SaturatingMulandSaturatingSubfor all bounded integers.serde1: ImplementSerializeandDeserializefor the bounded integers, making sure all values will never be out of bounds.zerocopy: ImplementIntoBytesandImmutablefor all bounded integers,Unalignedfor ones backed byu8ori8, andFromZerosfor suitable macro-generated ones.step_trait: Implement theSteptrait which allows the bounded integers to be easily used in ranges. This will require you to use nightly and place#![feature(step_trait)]in your crate root if you use the macro.