proc_macro/lib.rs
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//! A support library for macro authors when defining new macros.
//!
//! This library, provided by the standard distribution, provides the types
//! consumed in the interfaces of procedurally defined macro definitions such as
//! function-like macros `#[proc_macro]`, macro attributes `#[proc_macro_attribute]` and
//! custom derive attributes`#[proc_macro_derive]`.
//!
//! See [the book] for more.
//!
//! [the book]: ../book/ch19-06-macros.html#procedural-macros-for-generating-code-from-attributes
#![stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
#![deny(missing_docs)]
#![doc(
html_playground_url = "https://play.rust-lang.org/",
issue_tracker_base_url = "https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/",
test(no_crate_inject, attr(deny(warnings))),
test(attr(allow(dead_code, deprecated, unused_variables, unused_mut)))
)]
#![doc(rust_logo)]
#![feature(rustdoc_internals)]
// This library is copied into rust-analyzer to allow loading rustc compiled proc macros.
// Please avoid unstable features where possible to minimize the amount of changes necessary
// to make it compile with rust-analyzer on stable.
#![feature(rustc_allow_const_fn_unstable)]
#![feature(staged_api)]
#![feature(allow_internal_unstable)]
#![feature(decl_macro)]
#![feature(maybe_uninit_write_slice)]
#![feature(negative_impls)]
#![feature(panic_can_unwind)]
#![feature(restricted_std)]
#![feature(rustc_attrs)]
#![feature(min_specialization)]
#![feature(strict_provenance)]
#![recursion_limit = "256"]
#![allow(internal_features)]
#![deny(ffi_unwind_calls)]
#![warn(rustdoc::unescaped_backticks)]
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_internals", issue = "27812")]
#[doc(hidden)]
pub mod bridge;
mod diagnostic;
mod escape;
use std::ffi::CStr;
use std::ops::{Range, RangeBounds};
use std::path::PathBuf;
use std::str::FromStr;
use std::{error, fmt};
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_diagnostic", issue = "54140")]
pub use diagnostic::{Diagnostic, Level, MultiSpan};
use crate::escape::{escape_bytes, EscapeOptions};
/// Determines whether proc_macro has been made accessible to the currently
/// running program.
///
/// The proc_macro crate is only intended for use inside the implementation of
/// procedural macros. All the functions in this crate panic if invoked from
/// outside of a procedural macro, such as from a build script or unit test or
/// ordinary Rust binary.
///
/// With consideration for Rust libraries that are designed to support both
/// macro and non-macro use cases, `proc_macro::is_available()` provides a
/// non-panicking way to detect whether the infrastructure required to use the
/// API of proc_macro is presently available. Returns true if invoked from
/// inside of a procedural macro, false if invoked from any other binary.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_is_available", since = "1.57.0")]
pub fn is_available() -> bool {
bridge::client::is_available()
}
/// The main type provided by this crate, representing an abstract stream of
/// tokens, or, more specifically, a sequence of token trees.
/// The type provides interfaces for iterating over those token trees and, conversely,
/// collecting a number of token trees into one stream.
///
/// This is both the input and output of `#[proc_macro]`, `#[proc_macro_attribute]`
/// and `#[proc_macro_derive]` definitions.
#[rustc_diagnostic_item = "TokenStream"]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct TokenStream(Option<bridge::client::TokenStream>);
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl !Send for TokenStream {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl !Sync for TokenStream {}
/// Error returned from `TokenStream::from_str`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
#[non_exhaustive]
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct LexError;
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lexerror_impls", since = "1.44.0")]
impl fmt::Display for LexError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str("cannot parse string into token stream")
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lexerror_impls", since = "1.44.0")]
impl error::Error for LexError {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl !Send for LexError {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl !Sync for LexError {}
/// Error returned from `TokenStream::expand_expr`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_expand", issue = "90765")]
#[non_exhaustive]
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct ExpandError;
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_expand", issue = "90765")]
impl fmt::Display for ExpandError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str("macro expansion failed")
}
}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_expand", issue = "90765")]
impl error::Error for ExpandError {}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_expand", issue = "90765")]
impl !Send for ExpandError {}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_expand", issue = "90765")]
impl !Sync for ExpandError {}
impl TokenStream {
/// Returns an empty `TokenStream` containing no token trees.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn new() -> TokenStream {
TokenStream(None)
}
/// Checks if this `TokenStream` is empty.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn is_empty(&self) -> bool {
self.0.as_ref().map(|h| h.is_empty()).unwrap_or(true)
}
/// Parses this `TokenStream` as an expression and attempts to expand any
/// macros within it. Returns the expanded `TokenStream`.
///
/// Currently only expressions expanding to literals will succeed, although
/// this may be relaxed in the future.
///
/// NOTE: In error conditions, `expand_expr` may leave macros unexpanded,
/// report an error, failing compilation, and/or return an `Err(..)`. The
/// specific behavior for any error condition, and what conditions are
/// considered errors, is unspecified and may change in the future.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_expand", issue = "90765")]
pub fn expand_expr(&self) -> Result<TokenStream, ExpandError> {
let stream = self.0.as_ref().ok_or(ExpandError)?;
match bridge::client::TokenStream::expand_expr(stream) {
Ok(stream) => Ok(TokenStream(Some(stream))),
Err(_) => Err(ExpandError),
}
}
}
/// Attempts to break the string into tokens and parse those tokens into a token stream.
/// May fail for a number of reasons, for example, if the string contains unbalanced delimiters
/// or characters not existing in the language.
/// All tokens in the parsed stream get `Span::call_site()` spans.
///
/// NOTE: some errors may cause panics instead of returning `LexError`. We reserve the right to
/// change these errors into `LexError`s later.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl FromStr for TokenStream {
type Err = LexError;
fn from_str(src: &str) -> Result<TokenStream, LexError> {
Ok(TokenStream(Some(bridge::client::TokenStream::from_str(src))))
}
}
// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display`
// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two).
#[doc(hidden)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl ToString for TokenStream {
fn to_string(&self) -> String {
self.0.as_ref().map(|t| t.to_string()).unwrap_or_default()
}
}
/// Prints the token stream as a string that is supposed to be losslessly convertible back
/// into the same token stream (modulo spans), except for possibly `TokenTree::Group`s
/// with `Delimiter::None` delimiters and negative numeric literals.
///
/// Note: the exact form of the output is subject to change, e.g. there might
/// be changes in the whitespace used between tokens. Therefore, you should
/// *not* do any kind of simple substring matching on the output string (as
/// produced by `to_string`) to implement a proc macro, because that matching
/// might stop working if such changes happen. Instead, you should work at the
/// `TokenTree` level, e.g. matching against `TokenTree::Ident`,
/// `TokenTree::Punct`, or `TokenTree::Literal`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl fmt::Display for TokenStream {
#[allow(clippy::recursive_format_impl)] // clippy doesn't see the specialization
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str(&self.to_string())
}
}
/// Prints token in a form convenient for debugging.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for TokenStream {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str("TokenStream ")?;
f.debug_list().entries(self.clone()).finish()
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_token_stream_default", since = "1.45.0")]
impl Default for TokenStream {
fn default() -> Self {
TokenStream::new()
}
}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_quote", issue = "54722")]
pub use quote::{quote, quote_span};
fn tree_to_bridge_tree(
tree: TokenTree,
) -> bridge::TokenTree<bridge::client::TokenStream, bridge::client::Span, bridge::client::Symbol> {
match tree {
TokenTree::Group(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Group(tt.0),
TokenTree::Punct(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Punct(tt.0),
TokenTree::Ident(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Ident(tt.0),
TokenTree::Literal(tt) => bridge::TokenTree::Literal(tt.0),
}
}
/// Creates a token stream containing a single token tree.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl From<TokenTree> for TokenStream {
fn from(tree: TokenTree) -> TokenStream {
TokenStream(Some(bridge::client::TokenStream::from_token_tree(tree_to_bridge_tree(tree))))
}
}
/// Non-generic helper for implementing `FromIterator<TokenTree>` and
/// `Extend<TokenTree>` with less monomorphization in calling crates.
struct ConcatTreesHelper {
trees: Vec<
bridge::TokenTree<
bridge::client::TokenStream,
bridge::client::Span,
bridge::client::Symbol,
>,
>,
}
impl ConcatTreesHelper {
fn new(capacity: usize) -> Self {
ConcatTreesHelper { trees: Vec::with_capacity(capacity) }
}
fn push(&mut self, tree: TokenTree) {
self.trees.push(tree_to_bridge_tree(tree));
}
fn build(self) -> TokenStream {
if self.trees.is_empty() {
TokenStream(None)
} else {
TokenStream(Some(bridge::client::TokenStream::concat_trees(None, self.trees)))
}
}
fn append_to(self, stream: &mut TokenStream) {
if self.trees.is_empty() {
return;
}
stream.0 = Some(bridge::client::TokenStream::concat_trees(stream.0.take(), self.trees))
}
}
/// Non-generic helper for implementing `FromIterator<TokenStream>` and
/// `Extend<TokenStream>` with less monomorphization in calling crates.
struct ConcatStreamsHelper {
streams: Vec<bridge::client::TokenStream>,
}
impl ConcatStreamsHelper {
fn new(capacity: usize) -> Self {
ConcatStreamsHelper { streams: Vec::with_capacity(capacity) }
}
fn push(&mut self, stream: TokenStream) {
if let Some(stream) = stream.0 {
self.streams.push(stream);
}
}
fn build(mut self) -> TokenStream {
if self.streams.len() <= 1 {
TokenStream(self.streams.pop())
} else {
TokenStream(Some(bridge::client::TokenStream::concat_streams(None, self.streams)))
}
}
fn append_to(mut self, stream: &mut TokenStream) {
if self.streams.is_empty() {
return;
}
let base = stream.0.take();
if base.is_none() && self.streams.len() == 1 {
stream.0 = self.streams.pop();
} else {
stream.0 = Some(bridge::client::TokenStream::concat_streams(base, self.streams));
}
}
}
/// Collects a number of token trees into a single stream.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl FromIterator<TokenTree> for TokenStream {
fn from_iter<I: IntoIterator<Item = TokenTree>>(trees: I) -> Self {
let iter = trees.into_iter();
let mut builder = ConcatTreesHelper::new(iter.size_hint().0);
iter.for_each(|tree| builder.push(tree));
builder.build()
}
}
/// A "flattening" operation on token streams, collects token trees
/// from multiple token streams into a single stream.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl FromIterator<TokenStream> for TokenStream {
fn from_iter<I: IntoIterator<Item = TokenStream>>(streams: I) -> Self {
let iter = streams.into_iter();
let mut builder = ConcatStreamsHelper::new(iter.size_hint().0);
iter.for_each(|stream| builder.push(stream));
builder.build()
}
}
#[stable(feature = "token_stream_extend", since = "1.30.0")]
impl Extend<TokenTree> for TokenStream {
fn extend<I: IntoIterator<Item = TokenTree>>(&mut self, trees: I) {
let iter = trees.into_iter();
let mut builder = ConcatTreesHelper::new(iter.size_hint().0);
iter.for_each(|tree| builder.push(tree));
builder.append_to(self);
}
}
#[stable(feature = "token_stream_extend", since = "1.30.0")]
impl Extend<TokenStream> for TokenStream {
fn extend<I: IntoIterator<Item = TokenStream>>(&mut self, streams: I) {
let iter = streams.into_iter();
let mut builder = ConcatStreamsHelper::new(iter.size_hint().0);
iter.for_each(|stream| builder.push(stream));
builder.append_to(self);
}
}
/// Public implementation details for the `TokenStream` type, such as iterators.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub mod token_stream {
use crate::{bridge, Group, Ident, Literal, Punct, TokenStream, TokenTree};
/// An iterator over `TokenStream`'s `TokenTree`s.
/// The iteration is "shallow", e.g., the iterator doesn't recurse into delimited groups,
/// and returns whole groups as token trees.
#[derive(Clone)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub struct IntoIter(
std::vec::IntoIter<
bridge::TokenTree<
bridge::client::TokenStream,
bridge::client::Span,
bridge::client::Symbol,
>,
>,
);
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl Iterator for IntoIter {
type Item = TokenTree;
fn next(&mut self) -> Option<TokenTree> {
self.0.next().map(|tree| match tree {
bridge::TokenTree::Group(tt) => TokenTree::Group(Group(tt)),
bridge::TokenTree::Punct(tt) => TokenTree::Punct(Punct(tt)),
bridge::TokenTree::Ident(tt) => TokenTree::Ident(Ident(tt)),
bridge::TokenTree::Literal(tt) => TokenTree::Literal(Literal(tt)),
})
}
fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>) {
self.0.size_hint()
}
fn count(self) -> usize {
self.0.count()
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl IntoIterator for TokenStream {
type Item = TokenTree;
type IntoIter = IntoIter;
fn into_iter(self) -> IntoIter {
IntoIter(self.0.map(|v| v.into_trees()).unwrap_or_default().into_iter())
}
}
}
/// `quote!(..)` accepts arbitrary tokens and expands into a `TokenStream` describing the input.
/// For example, `quote!(a + b)` will produce an expression, that, when evaluated, constructs
/// the `TokenStream` `[Ident("a"), Punct('+', Alone), Ident("b")]`.
///
/// Unquoting is done with `$`, and works by taking the single next ident as the unquoted term.
/// To quote `$` itself, use `$$`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_quote", issue = "54722")]
#[allow_internal_unstable(proc_macro_def_site, proc_macro_internals)]
#[rustc_builtin_macro]
pub macro quote($($t:tt)*) {
/* compiler built-in */
}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_internals", issue = "27812")]
#[doc(hidden)]
mod quote;
/// A region of source code, along with macro expansion information.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
#[derive(Copy, Clone)]
pub struct Span(bridge::client::Span);
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Send for Span {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Sync for Span {}
macro_rules! diagnostic_method {
($name:ident, $level:expr) => {
/// Creates a new `Diagnostic` with the given `message` at the span
/// `self`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_diagnostic", issue = "54140")]
pub fn $name<T: Into<String>>(self, message: T) -> Diagnostic {
Diagnostic::spanned(self, $level, message)
}
};
}
impl Span {
/// A span that resolves at the macro definition site.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_def_site", issue = "54724")]
pub fn def_site() -> Span {
Span(bridge::client::Span::def_site())
}
/// The span of the invocation of the current procedural macro.
/// Identifiers created with this span will be resolved as if they were written
/// directly at the macro call location (call-site hygiene) and other code
/// at the macro call site will be able to refer to them as well.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn call_site() -> Span {
Span(bridge::client::Span::call_site())
}
/// A span that represents `macro_rules` hygiene, and sometimes resolves at the macro
/// definition site (local variables, labels, `$crate`) and sometimes at the macro
/// call site (everything else).
/// The span location is taken from the call-site.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_mixed_site", since = "1.45.0")]
pub fn mixed_site() -> Span {
Span(bridge::client::Span::mixed_site())
}
/// The original source file into which this span points.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn source_file(&self) -> SourceFile {
SourceFile(self.0.source_file())
}
/// The `Span` for the tokens in the previous macro expansion from which
/// `self` was generated from, if any.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn parent(&self) -> Option<Span> {
self.0.parent().map(Span)
}
/// The span for the origin source code that `self` was generated from. If
/// this `Span` wasn't generated from other macro expansions then the return
/// value is the same as `*self`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn source(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.source())
}
/// Returns the span's byte position range in the source file.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn byte_range(&self) -> Range<usize> {
self.0.byte_range()
}
/// Creates an empty span pointing to directly before this span.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn start(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.start())
}
/// Creates an empty span pointing to directly after this span.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn end(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.end())
}
/// The one-indexed line of the source file where the span starts.
///
/// To obtain the line of the span's end, use `span.end().line()`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn line(&self) -> usize {
self.0.line()
}
/// The one-indexed column of the source file where the span starts.
///
/// To obtain the column of the span's end, use `span.end().column()`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn column(&self) -> usize {
self.0.column()
}
/// Creates a new span encompassing `self` and `other`.
///
/// Returns `None` if `self` and `other` are from different files.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn join(&self, other: Span) -> Option<Span> {
self.0.join(other.0).map(Span)
}
/// Creates a new span with the same line/column information as `self` but
/// that resolves symbols as though it were at `other`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_span_resolved_at", since = "1.45.0")]
pub fn resolved_at(&self, other: Span) -> Span {
Span(self.0.resolved_at(other.0))
}
/// Creates a new span with the same name resolution behavior as `self` but
/// with the line/column information of `other`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_span_located_at", since = "1.45.0")]
pub fn located_at(&self, other: Span) -> Span {
other.resolved_at(*self)
}
/// Compares two spans to see if they're equal.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn eq(&self, other: &Span) -> bool {
self.0 == other.0
}
/// Returns the source text behind a span. This preserves the original source
/// code, including spaces and comments. It only returns a result if the span
/// corresponds to real source code.
///
/// Note: The observable result of a macro should only rely on the tokens and
/// not on this source text. The result of this function is a best effort to
/// be used for diagnostics only.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_source_text", since = "1.66.0")]
pub fn source_text(&self) -> Option<String> {
self.0.source_text()
}
// Used by the implementation of `Span::quote`
#[doc(hidden)]
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_internals", issue = "27812")]
pub fn save_span(&self) -> usize {
self.0.save_span()
}
// Used by the implementation of `Span::quote`
#[doc(hidden)]
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_internals", issue = "27812")]
pub fn recover_proc_macro_span(id: usize) -> Span {
Span(bridge::client::Span::recover_proc_macro_span(id))
}
diagnostic_method!(error, Level::Error);
diagnostic_method!(warning, Level::Warning);
diagnostic_method!(note, Level::Note);
diagnostic_method!(help, Level::Help);
}
/// Prints a span in a form convenient for debugging.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for Span {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
self.0.fmt(f)
}
}
/// The source file of a given `Span`.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct SourceFile(bridge::client::SourceFile);
impl SourceFile {
/// Gets the path to this source file.
///
/// ### Note
/// If the code span associated with this `SourceFile` was generated by an external macro, this
/// macro, this might not be an actual path on the filesystem. Use [`is_real`] to check.
///
/// Also note that even if `is_real` returns `true`, if `--remap-path-prefix` was passed on
/// the command line, the path as given might not actually be valid.
///
/// [`is_real`]: Self::is_real
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn path(&self) -> PathBuf {
PathBuf::from(self.0.path())
}
/// Returns `true` if this source file is a real source file, and not generated by an external
/// macro's expansion.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn is_real(&self) -> bool {
// This is a hack until intercrate spans are implemented and we can have real source files
// for spans generated in external macros.
// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/43604#issuecomment-333334368
self.0.is_real()
}
}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
impl fmt::Debug for SourceFile {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("SourceFile")
.field("path", &self.path())
.field("is_real", &self.is_real())
.finish()
}
}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
impl PartialEq for SourceFile {
fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
self.0.eq(&other.0)
}
}
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
impl Eq for SourceFile {}
/// A single token or a delimited sequence of token trees (e.g., `[1, (), ..]`).
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
#[derive(Clone)]
pub enum TokenTree {
/// A token stream surrounded by bracket delimiters.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Group(#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")] Group),
/// An identifier.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Ident(#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")] Ident),
/// A single punctuation character (`+`, `,`, `$`, etc.).
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Punct(#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")] Punct),
/// A literal character (`'a'`), string (`"hello"`), number (`2.3`), etc.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Literal(#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")] Literal),
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Send for TokenTree {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Sync for TokenTree {}
impl TokenTree {
/// Returns the span of this tree, delegating to the `span` method of
/// the contained token or a delimited stream.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn span(&self) -> Span {
match *self {
TokenTree::Group(ref t) => t.span(),
TokenTree::Ident(ref t) => t.span(),
TokenTree::Punct(ref t) => t.span(),
TokenTree::Literal(ref t) => t.span(),
}
}
/// Configures the span for *only this token*.
///
/// Note that if this token is a `Group` then this method will not configure
/// the span of each of the internal tokens, this will simply delegate to
/// the `set_span` method of each variant.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) {
match *self {
TokenTree::Group(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span),
TokenTree::Ident(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span),
TokenTree::Punct(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span),
TokenTree::Literal(ref mut t) => t.set_span(span),
}
}
}
/// Prints token tree in a form convenient for debugging.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for TokenTree {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
// Each of these has the name in the struct type in the derived debug,
// so don't bother with an extra layer of indirection
match *self {
TokenTree::Group(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f),
TokenTree::Ident(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f),
TokenTree::Punct(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f),
TokenTree::Literal(ref tt) => tt.fmt(f),
}
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl From<Group> for TokenTree {
fn from(g: Group) -> TokenTree {
TokenTree::Group(g)
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl From<Ident> for TokenTree {
fn from(g: Ident) -> TokenTree {
TokenTree::Ident(g)
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl From<Punct> for TokenTree {
fn from(g: Punct) -> TokenTree {
TokenTree::Punct(g)
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl From<Literal> for TokenTree {
fn from(g: Literal) -> TokenTree {
TokenTree::Literal(g)
}
}
// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display`
// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two).
#[doc(hidden)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl ToString for TokenTree {
fn to_string(&self) -> String {
match *self {
TokenTree::Group(ref t) => t.to_string(),
TokenTree::Ident(ref t) => t.to_string(),
TokenTree::Punct(ref t) => t.to_string(),
TokenTree::Literal(ref t) => t.to_string(),
}
}
}
/// Prints the token tree as a string that is supposed to be losslessly convertible back
/// into the same token tree (modulo spans), except for possibly `TokenTree::Group`s
/// with `Delimiter::None` delimiters and negative numeric literals.
///
/// Note: the exact form of the output is subject to change, e.g. there might
/// be changes in the whitespace used between tokens. Therefore, you should
/// *not* do any kind of simple substring matching on the output string (as
/// produced by `to_string`) to implement a proc macro, because that matching
/// might stop working if such changes happen. Instead, you should work at the
/// `TokenTree` level, e.g. matching against `TokenTree::Ident`,
/// `TokenTree::Punct`, or `TokenTree::Literal`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Display for TokenTree {
#[allow(clippy::recursive_format_impl)] // clippy doesn't see the specialization
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str(&self.to_string())
}
}
/// A delimited token stream.
///
/// A `Group` internally contains a `TokenStream` which is surrounded by `Delimiter`s.
#[derive(Clone)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub struct Group(bridge::Group<bridge::client::TokenStream, bridge::client::Span>);
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Send for Group {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Sync for Group {}
/// Describes how a sequence of token trees is delimited.
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub enum Delimiter {
/// `( ... )`
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Parenthesis,
/// `{ ... }`
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Brace,
/// `[ ... ]`
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Bracket,
/// `∅ ... ∅`
/// An invisible delimiter, that may, for example, appear around tokens coming from a
/// "macro variable" `$var`. It is important to preserve operator priorities in cases like
/// `$var * 3` where `$var` is `1 + 2`.
/// Invisible delimiters might not survive roundtrip of a token stream through a string.
///
/// <div class="warning">
///
/// Note: rustc currently can ignore the grouping of tokens delimited by `None` in the output
/// of a proc_macro. Only `None`-delimited groups created by a macro_rules macro in the input
/// of a proc_macro macro are preserved, and only in very specific circumstances.
/// Any `None`-delimited groups (re)created by a proc_macro will therefore not preserve
/// operator priorities as indicated above. The other `Delimiter` variants should be used
/// instead in this context. This is a rustc bug. For details, see
/// [rust-lang/rust#67062](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/67062).
///
/// </div>
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
None,
}
impl Group {
/// Creates a new `Group` with the given delimiter and token stream.
///
/// This constructor will set the span for this group to
/// `Span::call_site()`. To change the span you can use the `set_span`
/// method below.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn new(delimiter: Delimiter, stream: TokenStream) -> Group {
Group(bridge::Group {
delimiter,
stream: stream.0,
span: bridge::DelimSpan::from_single(Span::call_site().0),
})
}
/// Returns the delimiter of this `Group`
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn delimiter(&self) -> Delimiter {
self.0.delimiter
}
/// Returns the `TokenStream` of tokens that are delimited in this `Group`.
///
/// Note that the returned token stream does not include the delimiter
/// returned above.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn stream(&self) -> TokenStream {
TokenStream(self.0.stream.clone())
}
/// Returns the span for the delimiters of this token stream, spanning the
/// entire `Group`.
///
/// ```text
/// pub fn span(&self) -> Span {
/// ^^^^^^^
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn span(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.span.entire)
}
/// Returns the span pointing to the opening delimiter of this group.
///
/// ```text
/// pub fn span_open(&self) -> Span {
/// ^
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_group_span", since = "1.55.0")]
pub fn span_open(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.span.open)
}
/// Returns the span pointing to the closing delimiter of this group.
///
/// ```text
/// pub fn span_close(&self) -> Span {
/// ^
/// ```
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_group_span", since = "1.55.0")]
pub fn span_close(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.span.close)
}
/// Configures the span for this `Group`'s delimiters, but not its internal
/// tokens.
///
/// This method will **not** set the span of all the internal tokens spanned
/// by this group, but rather it will only set the span of the delimiter
/// tokens at the level of the `Group`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) {
self.0.span = bridge::DelimSpan::from_single(span.0);
}
}
// N.B., the bridge only provides `to_string`, implement `fmt::Display`
// based on it (the reverse of the usual relationship between the two).
#[doc(hidden)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib", since = "1.15.0")]
impl ToString for Group {
fn to_string(&self) -> String {
TokenStream::from(TokenTree::from(self.clone())).to_string()
}
}
/// Prints the group as a string that should be losslessly convertible back
/// into the same group (modulo spans), except for possibly `TokenTree::Group`s
/// with `Delimiter::None` delimiters.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Display for Group {
#[allow(clippy::recursive_format_impl)] // clippy doesn't see the specialization
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.write_str(&self.to_string())
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for Group {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("Group")
.field("delimiter", &self.delimiter())
.field("stream", &self.stream())
.field("span", &self.span())
.finish()
}
}
/// A `Punct` is a single punctuation character such as `+`, `-` or `#`.
///
/// Multi-character operators like `+=` are represented as two instances of `Punct` with different
/// forms of `Spacing` returned.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
#[derive(Clone)]
pub struct Punct(bridge::Punct<bridge::client::Span>);
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Send for Punct {}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl !Sync for Punct {}
/// Indicates whether a `Punct` token can join with the following token
/// to form a multi-character operator.
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub enum Spacing {
/// A `Punct` token can join with the following token to form a multi-character operator.
///
/// In token streams constructed using proc macro interfaces, `Joint` punctuation tokens can be
/// followed by any other tokens. However, in token streams parsed from source code, the
/// compiler will only set spacing to `Joint` in the following cases.
/// - When a `Punct` is immediately followed by another `Punct` without a whitespace. E.g. `+`
/// is `Joint` in `+=` and `++`.
/// - When a single quote `'` is immediately followed by an identifier without a whitespace.
/// E.g. `'` is `Joint` in `'lifetime`.
///
/// This list may be extended in the future to enable more token combinations.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Joint,
/// A `Punct` token cannot join with the following token to form a multi-character operator.
///
/// `Alone` punctuation tokens can be followed by any other tokens. In token streams parsed
/// from source code, the compiler will set spacing to `Alone` in all cases not covered by the
/// conditions for `Joint` above. E.g. `+` is `Alone` in `+ =`, `+ident` and `+()`. In
/// particular, tokens not followed by anything will be marked as `Alone`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
Alone,
}
impl Punct {
/// Creates a new `Punct` from the given character and spacing.
/// The `ch` argument must be a valid punctuation character permitted by the language,
/// otherwise the function will panic.
///
/// The returned `Punct` will have the default span of `Span::call_site()`
/// which can be further configured with the `set_span` method below.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn new(ch: char, spacing: Spacing) -> Punct {
const LEGAL_CHARS: &[char] = &[
'=', '<', '>', '!', '~', '+', '-', '*', '/', '%', '^', '&', '|', '@', '.', ',', ';',
':', '#', '$', '?', '\'',
];
if !LEGAL_CHARS.contains(&ch) {
panic!("unsupported character `{:?}`", ch);
}
Punct(bridge::Punct {
ch: ch as u8,
joint: spacing == Spacing::Joint,
span: Span::call_site().0,
})
}
/// Returns the value of this punctuation character as `char`.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn as_char(&self) -> char {
self.0.ch as char
}
/// Returns the spacing of this punctuation character, indicating whether it can be potentially
/// combined into a multi-character operator with the following token (`Joint`), or whether the
/// operator has definitely ended (`Alone`).
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn spacing(&self) -> Spacing {
if self.0.joint { Spacing::Joint } else { Spacing::Alone }
}
/// Returns the span for this punctuation character.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn span(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.span)
}
/// Configure the span for this punctuation character.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) {
self.0.span = span.0;
}
}
#[doc(hidden)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl ToString for Punct {
fn to_string(&self) -> String {
self.as_char().to_string()
}
}
/// Prints the punctuation character as a string that should be losslessly convertible
/// back into the same character.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Display for Punct {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
write!(f, "{}", self.as_char())
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for Punct {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("Punct")
.field("ch", &self.as_char())
.field("spacing", &self.spacing())
.field("span", &self.span())
.finish()
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_punct_eq", since = "1.50.0")]
impl PartialEq<char> for Punct {
fn eq(&self, rhs: &char) -> bool {
self.as_char() == *rhs
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_punct_eq_flipped", since = "1.52.0")]
impl PartialEq<Punct> for char {
fn eq(&self, rhs: &Punct) -> bool {
*self == rhs.as_char()
}
}
/// An identifier (`ident`).
#[derive(Clone)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub struct Ident(bridge::Ident<bridge::client::Span, bridge::client::Symbol>);
impl Ident {
/// Creates a new `Ident` with the given `string` as well as the specified
/// `span`.
/// The `string` argument must be a valid identifier permitted by the
/// language (including keywords, e.g. `self` or `fn`). Otherwise, the function will panic.
///
/// Note that `span`, currently in rustc, configures the hygiene information
/// for this identifier.
///
/// As of this time `Span::call_site()` explicitly opts-in to "call-site" hygiene
/// meaning that identifiers created with this span will be resolved as if they were written
/// directly at the location of the macro call, and other code at the macro call site will be
/// able to refer to them as well.
///
/// Later spans like `Span::def_site()` will allow to opt-in to "definition-site" hygiene
/// meaning that identifiers created with this span will be resolved at the location of the
/// macro definition and other code at the macro call site will not be able to refer to them.
///
/// Due to the current importance of hygiene this constructor, unlike other
/// tokens, requires a `Span` to be specified at construction.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn new(string: &str, span: Span) -> Ident {
Ident(bridge::Ident {
sym: bridge::client::Symbol::new_ident(string, false),
is_raw: false,
span: span.0,
})
}
/// Same as `Ident::new`, but creates a raw identifier (`r#ident`).
/// The `string` argument be a valid identifier permitted by the language
/// (including keywords, e.g. `fn`). Keywords which are usable in path segments
/// (e.g. `self`, `super`) are not supported, and will cause a panic.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_raw_ident", since = "1.47.0")]
pub fn new_raw(string: &str, span: Span) -> Ident {
Ident(bridge::Ident {
sym: bridge::client::Symbol::new_ident(string, true),
is_raw: true,
span: span.0,
})
}
/// Returns the span of this `Ident`, encompassing the entire string returned
/// by [`to_string`](ToString::to_string).
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn span(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.span)
}
/// Configures the span of this `Ident`, possibly changing its hygiene context.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) {
self.0.span = span.0;
}
}
#[doc(hidden)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl ToString for Ident {
fn to_string(&self) -> String {
self.0.sym.with(|sym| if self.0.is_raw { ["r#", sym].concat() } else { sym.to_owned() })
}
}
/// Prints the identifier as a string that should be losslessly convertible back
/// into the same identifier.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Display for Ident {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
if self.0.is_raw {
f.write_str("r#")?;
}
fmt::Display::fmt(&self.0.sym, f)
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for Ident {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("Ident")
.field("ident", &self.to_string())
.field("span", &self.span())
.finish()
}
}
/// A literal string (`"hello"`), byte string (`b"hello"`),
/// character (`'a'`), byte character (`b'a'`), an integer or floating point number
/// with or without a suffix (`1`, `1u8`, `2.3`, `2.3f32`).
/// Boolean literals like `true` and `false` do not belong here, they are `Ident`s.
#[derive(Clone)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub struct Literal(bridge::Literal<bridge::client::Span, bridge::client::Symbol>);
macro_rules! suffixed_int_literals {
($($name:ident => $kind:ident,)*) => ($(
/// Creates a new suffixed integer literal with the specified value.
///
/// This function will create an integer like `1u32` where the integer
/// value specified is the first part of the token and the integral is
/// also suffixed at the end.
/// Literals created from negative numbers might not survive round-trips through
/// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal).
///
/// Literals created through this method have the `Span::call_site()`
/// span by default, which can be configured with the `set_span` method
/// below.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn $name(n: $kind) -> Literal {
Literal(bridge::Literal {
kind: bridge::LitKind::Integer,
symbol: bridge::client::Symbol::new(&n.to_string()),
suffix: Some(bridge::client::Symbol::new(stringify!($kind))),
span: Span::call_site().0,
})
}
)*)
}
macro_rules! unsuffixed_int_literals {
($($name:ident => $kind:ident,)*) => ($(
/// Creates a new unsuffixed integer literal with the specified value.
///
/// This function will create an integer like `1` where the integer
/// value specified is the first part of the token. No suffix is
/// specified on this token, meaning that invocations like
/// `Literal::i8_unsuffixed(1)` are equivalent to
/// `Literal::u32_unsuffixed(1)`.
/// Literals created from negative numbers might not survive rountrips through
/// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal).
///
/// Literals created through this method have the `Span::call_site()`
/// span by default, which can be configured with the `set_span` method
/// below.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn $name(n: $kind) -> Literal {
Literal(bridge::Literal {
kind: bridge::LitKind::Integer,
symbol: bridge::client::Symbol::new(&n.to_string()),
suffix: None,
span: Span::call_site().0,
})
}
)*)
}
impl Literal {
fn new(kind: bridge::LitKind, value: &str, suffix: Option<&str>) -> Self {
Literal(bridge::Literal {
kind,
symbol: bridge::client::Symbol::new(value),
suffix: suffix.map(bridge::client::Symbol::new),
span: Span::call_site().0,
})
}
suffixed_int_literals! {
u8_suffixed => u8,
u16_suffixed => u16,
u32_suffixed => u32,
u64_suffixed => u64,
u128_suffixed => u128,
usize_suffixed => usize,
i8_suffixed => i8,
i16_suffixed => i16,
i32_suffixed => i32,
i64_suffixed => i64,
i128_suffixed => i128,
isize_suffixed => isize,
}
unsuffixed_int_literals! {
u8_unsuffixed => u8,
u16_unsuffixed => u16,
u32_unsuffixed => u32,
u64_unsuffixed => u64,
u128_unsuffixed => u128,
usize_unsuffixed => usize,
i8_unsuffixed => i8,
i16_unsuffixed => i16,
i32_unsuffixed => i32,
i64_unsuffixed => i64,
i128_unsuffixed => i128,
isize_unsuffixed => isize,
}
/// Creates a new unsuffixed floating-point literal.
///
/// This constructor is similar to those like `Literal::i8_unsuffixed` where
/// the float's value is emitted directly into the token but no suffix is
/// used, so it may be inferred to be a `f64` later in the compiler.
/// Literals created from negative numbers might not survive rountrips through
/// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal).
///
/// # Panics
///
/// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for
/// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn f32_unsuffixed(n: f32) -> Literal {
if !n.is_finite() {
panic!("Invalid float literal {n}");
}
let mut repr = n.to_string();
if !repr.contains('.') {
repr.push_str(".0");
}
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Float, &repr, None)
}
/// Creates a new suffixed floating-point literal.
///
/// This constructor will create a literal like `1.0f32` where the value
/// specified is the preceding part of the token and `f32` is the suffix of
/// the token. This token will always be inferred to be an `f32` in the
/// compiler.
/// Literals created from negative numbers might not survive rountrips through
/// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal).
///
/// # Panics
///
/// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for
/// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn f32_suffixed(n: f32) -> Literal {
if !n.is_finite() {
panic!("Invalid float literal {n}");
}
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Float, &n.to_string(), Some("f32"))
}
/// Creates a new unsuffixed floating-point literal.
///
/// This constructor is similar to those like `Literal::i8_unsuffixed` where
/// the float's value is emitted directly into the token but no suffix is
/// used, so it may be inferred to be a `f64` later in the compiler.
/// Literals created from negative numbers might not survive rountrips through
/// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal).
///
/// # Panics
///
/// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for
/// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn f64_unsuffixed(n: f64) -> Literal {
if !n.is_finite() {
panic!("Invalid float literal {n}");
}
let mut repr = n.to_string();
if !repr.contains('.') {
repr.push_str(".0");
}
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Float, &repr, None)
}
/// Creates a new suffixed floating-point literal.
///
/// This constructor will create a literal like `1.0f64` where the value
/// specified is the preceding part of the token and `f64` is the suffix of
/// the token. This token will always be inferred to be an `f64` in the
/// compiler.
/// Literals created from negative numbers might not survive rountrips through
/// `TokenStream` or strings and may be broken into two tokens (`-` and positive literal).
///
/// # Panics
///
/// This function requires that the specified float is finite, for
/// example if it is infinity or NaN this function will panic.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn f64_suffixed(n: f64) -> Literal {
if !n.is_finite() {
panic!("Invalid float literal {n}");
}
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Float, &n.to_string(), Some("f64"))
}
/// String literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn string(string: &str) -> Literal {
let escape = EscapeOptions {
escape_single_quote: false,
escape_double_quote: true,
escape_nonascii: false,
};
let repr = escape_bytes(string.as_bytes(), escape);
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Str, &repr, None)
}
/// Character literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn character(ch: char) -> Literal {
let escape = EscapeOptions {
escape_single_quote: true,
escape_double_quote: false,
escape_nonascii: false,
};
let repr = escape_bytes(ch.encode_utf8(&mut [0u8; 4]).as_bytes(), escape);
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Char, &repr, None)
}
/// Byte character literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_byte_character", since = "1.79.0")]
pub fn byte_character(byte: u8) -> Literal {
let escape = EscapeOptions {
escape_single_quote: true,
escape_double_quote: false,
escape_nonascii: true,
};
let repr = escape_bytes(&[byte], escape);
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::Byte, &repr, None)
}
/// Byte string literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn byte_string(bytes: &[u8]) -> Literal {
let escape = EscapeOptions {
escape_single_quote: false,
escape_double_quote: true,
escape_nonascii: true,
};
let repr = escape_bytes(bytes, escape);
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::ByteStr, &repr, None)
}
/// C string literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_c_str_literals", since = "1.79.0")]
pub fn c_string(string: &CStr) -> Literal {
let escape = EscapeOptions {
escape_single_quote: false,
escape_double_quote: true,
escape_nonascii: false,
};
let repr = escape_bytes(string.to_bytes(), escape);
Literal::new(bridge::LitKind::CStr, &repr, None)
}
/// Returns the span encompassing this literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn span(&self) -> Span {
Span(self.0.span)
}
/// Configures the span associated for this literal.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
pub fn set_span(&mut self, span: Span) {
self.0.span = span.0;
}
/// Returns a `Span` that is a subset of `self.span()` containing only the
/// source bytes in range `range`. Returns `None` if the would-be trimmed
/// span is outside the bounds of `self`.
// FIXME(SergioBenitez): check that the byte range starts and ends at a
// UTF-8 boundary of the source. otherwise, it's likely that a panic will
// occur elsewhere when the source text is printed.
// FIXME(SergioBenitez): there is no way for the user to know what
// `self.span()` actually maps to, so this method can currently only be
// called blindly. For example, `to_string()` for the character 'c' returns
// "'\u{63}'"; there is no way for the user to know whether the source text
// was 'c' or whether it was '\u{63}'.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_span", issue = "54725")]
pub fn subspan<R: RangeBounds<usize>>(&self, range: R) -> Option<Span> {
self.0.span.subspan(range.start_bound().cloned(), range.end_bound().cloned()).map(Span)
}
fn with_symbol_and_suffix<R>(&self, f: impl FnOnce(&str, &str) -> R) -> R {
self.0.symbol.with(|symbol| match self.0.suffix {
Some(suffix) => suffix.with(|suffix| f(symbol, suffix)),
None => f(symbol, ""),
})
}
/// Invokes the callback with a `&[&str]` consisting of each part of the
/// literal's representation. This is done to allow the `ToString` and
/// `Display` implementations to borrow references to symbol values, and
/// both be optimized to reduce overhead.
fn with_stringify_parts<R>(&self, f: impl FnOnce(&[&str]) -> R) -> R {
/// Returns a string containing exactly `num` '#' characters.
/// Uses a 256-character source string literal which is always safe to
/// index with a `u8` index.
fn get_hashes_str(num: u8) -> &'static str {
const HASHES: &str = "\
################################################################\
################################################################\
################################################################\
################################################################\
";
const _: () = assert!(HASHES.len() == 256);
&HASHES[..num as usize]
}
self.with_symbol_and_suffix(|symbol, suffix| match self.0.kind {
bridge::LitKind::Byte => f(&["b'", symbol, "'", suffix]),
bridge::LitKind::Char => f(&["'", symbol, "'", suffix]),
bridge::LitKind::Str => f(&["\"", symbol, "\"", suffix]),
bridge::LitKind::StrRaw(n) => {
let hashes = get_hashes_str(n);
f(&["r", hashes, "\"", symbol, "\"", hashes, suffix])
}
bridge::LitKind::ByteStr => f(&["b\"", symbol, "\"", suffix]),
bridge::LitKind::ByteStrRaw(n) => {
let hashes = get_hashes_str(n);
f(&["br", hashes, "\"", symbol, "\"", hashes, suffix])
}
bridge::LitKind::CStr => f(&["c\"", symbol, "\"", suffix]),
bridge::LitKind::CStrRaw(n) => {
let hashes = get_hashes_str(n);
f(&["cr", hashes, "\"", symbol, "\"", hashes, suffix])
}
bridge::LitKind::Integer | bridge::LitKind::Float | bridge::LitKind::ErrWithGuar => {
f(&[symbol, suffix])
}
})
}
}
/// Parse a single literal from its stringified representation.
///
/// In order to parse successfully, the input string must not contain anything
/// but the literal token. Specifically, it must not contain whitespace or
/// comments in addition to the literal.
///
/// The resulting literal token will have a `Span::call_site()` span.
///
/// NOTE: some errors may cause panics instead of returning `LexError`. We
/// reserve the right to change these errors into `LexError`s later.
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_literal_parse", since = "1.54.0")]
impl FromStr for Literal {
type Err = LexError;
fn from_str(src: &str) -> Result<Self, LexError> {
match bridge::client::FreeFunctions::literal_from_str(src) {
Ok(literal) => Ok(Literal(literal)),
Err(()) => Err(LexError),
}
}
}
#[doc(hidden)]
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl ToString for Literal {
fn to_string(&self) -> String {
self.with_stringify_parts(|parts| parts.concat())
}
}
/// Prints the literal as a string that should be losslessly convertible
/// back into the same literal (except for possible rounding for floating point literals).
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Display for Literal {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
self.with_stringify_parts(|parts| {
for part in parts {
fmt::Display::fmt(part, f)?;
}
Ok(())
})
}
}
#[stable(feature = "proc_macro_lib2", since = "1.29.0")]
impl fmt::Debug for Literal {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
f.debug_struct("Literal")
// format the kind on one line even in {:#?} mode
.field("kind", &format_args!("{:?}", self.0.kind))
.field("symbol", &self.0.symbol)
// format `Some("...")` on one line even in {:#?} mode
.field("suffix", &format_args!("{:?}", self.0.suffix))
.field("span", &self.0.span)
.finish()
}
}
/// Tracked access to environment variables.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_tracked_env", issue = "99515")]
pub mod tracked_env {
use std::env::{self, VarError};
use std::ffi::OsStr;
/// Retrieve an environment variable and add it to build dependency info.
/// The build system executing the compiler will know that the variable was accessed during
/// compilation, and will be able to rerun the build when the value of that variable changes.
/// Besides the dependency tracking this function should be equivalent to `env::var` from the
/// standard library, except that the argument must be UTF-8.
#[unstable(feature = "proc_macro_tracked_env", issue = "99515")]
pub fn var<K: AsRef<OsStr> + AsRef<str>>(key: K) -> Result<String, VarError> {
let key: &str = key.as_ref();
let value = crate::bridge::client::FreeFunctions::injected_env_var(key)
.map_or_else(|| env::var(key), Ok);
crate::bridge::client::FreeFunctions::track_env_var(key, value.as_deref().ok());
value
}
}
/// Tracked access to additional files.
#[unstable(feature = "track_path", issue = "99515")]
pub mod tracked_path {
/// Track a file explicitly.
///
/// Commonly used for tracking asset preprocessing.
#[unstable(feature = "track_path", issue = "99515")]
pub fn path<P: AsRef<str>>(path: P) {
let path: &str = path.as_ref();
crate::bridge::client::FreeFunctions::track_path(path);
}
}