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//! Character conversions.
use crate::char::TryFromCharError;
use crate::convert::TryFrom;
use crate::error::Error;
use crate::fmt;
use crate::mem::transmute;
use crate::str::FromStr;
/// Converts a `u32` to a `char`. See [`char::from_u32`].
#[must_use]
#[inline]
pub(super) const fn from_u32(i: u32) -> Option<char> {
// FIXME: once Result::ok is const fn, use it here
match char_try_from_u32(i) {
Ok(c) => Some(c),
Err(_) => None,
}
}
/// Converts a `u32` to a `char`, ignoring validity. See [`char::from_u32_unchecked`].
#[inline]
#[must_use]
pub(super) const unsafe fn from_u32_unchecked(i: u32) -> char {
// SAFETY: the caller must guarantee that `i` is a valid char value.
if cfg!(debug_assertions) { char::from_u32(i).unwrap() } else { unsafe { transmute(i) } }
}
#[stable(feature = "char_convert", since = "1.13.0")]
impl From<char> for u32 {
/// Converts a [`char`] into a [`u32`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::mem;
///
/// let c = 'c';
/// let u = u32::from(c);
/// assert!(4 == mem::size_of_val(&u))
/// ```
#[inline]
fn from(c: char) -> Self {
c as u32
}
}
#[stable(feature = "more_char_conversions", since = "1.51.0")]
impl From<char> for u64 {
/// Converts a [`char`] into a [`u64`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::mem;
///
/// let c = '👤';
/// let u = u64::from(c);
/// assert!(8 == mem::size_of_val(&u))
/// ```
#[inline]
fn from(c: char) -> Self {
// The char is casted to the value of the code point, then zero-extended to 64 bit.
// See [https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/operator-expr.html#semantics]
c as u64
}
}
#[stable(feature = "more_char_conversions", since = "1.51.0")]
impl From<char> for u128 {
/// Converts a [`char`] into a [`u128`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::mem;
///
/// let c = '⚙';
/// let u = u128::from(c);
/// assert!(16 == mem::size_of_val(&u))
/// ```
#[inline]
fn from(c: char) -> Self {
// The char is casted to the value of the code point, then zero-extended to 128 bit.
// See [https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/expressions/operator-expr.html#semantics]
c as u128
}
}
/// Maps a `char` with code point in U+0000..=U+00FF to a byte in 0x00..=0xFF with same value,
/// failing if the code point is greater than U+00FF.
///
/// See [`impl From<u8> for char`](char#impl-From<u8>-for-char) for details on the encoding.
#[stable(feature = "u8_from_char", since = "1.59.0")]
impl TryFrom<char> for u8 {
type Error = TryFromCharError;
/// Tries to convert a [`char`] into a [`u8`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// let a = 'ÿ'; // U+00FF
/// let b = 'Ā'; // U+0100
/// assert_eq!(u8::try_from(a), Ok(0xFF_u8));
/// assert!(u8::try_from(b).is_err());
/// ```
#[inline]
fn try_from(c: char) -> Result<u8, Self::Error> {
u8::try_from(u32::from(c)).map_err(|_| TryFromCharError(()))
}
}
/// Maps a `char` with code point in U+0000..=U+FFFF to a `u16` in 0x0000..=0xFFFF with same value,
/// failing if the code point is greater than U+FFFF.
///
/// This corresponds to the UCS-2 encoding, as specified in ISO/IEC 10646:2003.
#[stable(feature = "u16_from_char", since = "CURRENT_RUSTC_VERSION")]
impl TryFrom<char> for u16 {
type Error = TryFromCharError;
/// Tries to convert a [`char`] into a [`u16`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// let trans_rights = '⚧'; // U+26A7
/// let ninjas = '🥷'; // U+1F977
/// assert_eq!(u16::try_from(trans_rights), Ok(0x26A7_u16));
/// assert!(u16::try_from(ninjas).is_err());
/// ```
#[inline]
fn try_from(c: char) -> Result<u16, Self::Error> {
u16::try_from(u32::from(c)).map_err(|_| TryFromCharError(()))
}
}
/// Maps a byte in 0x00..=0xFF to a `char` whose code point has the same value, in U+0000..=U+00FF.
///
/// Unicode is designed such that this effectively decodes bytes
/// with the character encoding that IANA calls ISO-8859-1.
/// This encoding is compatible with ASCII.
///
/// Note that this is different from ISO/IEC 8859-1 a.k.a. ISO 8859-1 (with one less hyphen),
/// which leaves some "blanks", byte values that are not assigned to any character.
/// ISO-8859-1 (the IANA one) assigns them to the C0 and C1 control codes.
///
/// Note that this is *also* different from Windows-1252 a.k.a. code page 1252,
/// which is a superset ISO/IEC 8859-1 that assigns some (not all!) blanks
/// to punctuation and various Latin characters.
///
/// To confuse things further, [on the Web](https://encoding.spec.whatwg.org/)
/// `ascii`, `iso-8859-1`, and `windows-1252` are all aliases
/// for a superset of Windows-1252 that fills the remaining blanks with corresponding
/// C0 and C1 control codes.
#[stable(feature = "char_convert", since = "1.13.0")]
impl From<u8> for char {
/// Converts a [`u8`] into a [`char`].
///
/// # Examples
///
/// ```
/// use std::mem;
///
/// let u = 32 as u8;
/// let c = char::from(u);
/// assert!(4 == mem::size_of_val(&c))
/// ```
#[inline]
fn from(i: u8) -> Self {
i as char
}
}
/// An error which can be returned when parsing a char.
///
/// This `struct` is created when using the [`char::from_str`] method.
#[stable(feature = "char_from_str", since = "1.20.0")]
#[derive(Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub struct ParseCharError {
kind: CharErrorKind,
}
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
enum CharErrorKind {
EmptyString,
TooManyChars,
}
#[stable(feature = "char_from_str", since = "1.20.0")]
impl Error for ParseCharError {
#[allow(deprecated)]
fn description(&self) -> &str {
match self.kind {
CharErrorKind::EmptyString => "cannot parse char from empty string",
CharErrorKind::TooManyChars => "too many characters in string",
}
}
}
#[stable(feature = "char_from_str", since = "1.20.0")]
impl fmt::Display for ParseCharError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
#[allow(deprecated)]
self.description().fmt(f)
}
}
#[stable(feature = "char_from_str", since = "1.20.0")]
impl FromStr for char {
type Err = ParseCharError;
#[inline]
fn from_str(s: &str) -> Result<Self, Self::Err> {
let mut chars = s.chars();
match (chars.next(), chars.next()) {
(None, _) => Err(ParseCharError { kind: CharErrorKind::EmptyString }),
(Some(c), None) => Ok(c),
_ => Err(ParseCharError { kind: CharErrorKind::TooManyChars }),
}
}
}
#[inline]
const fn char_try_from_u32(i: u32) -> Result<char, CharTryFromError> {
// This is an optimized version of the check
// (i > MAX as u32) || (i >= 0xD800 && i <= 0xDFFF),
// which can also be written as
// i >= 0x110000 || (i >= 0xD800 && i < 0xE000).
//
// The XOR with 0xD800 permutes the ranges such that 0xD800..0xE000 is
// mapped to 0x0000..0x0800, while keeping all the high bits outside 0xFFFF the same.
// In particular, numbers >= 0x110000 stay in this range.
//
// Subtracting 0x800 causes 0x0000..0x0800 to wrap, meaning that a single
// unsigned comparison against 0x110000 - 0x800 will detect both the wrapped
// surrogate range as well as the numbers originally larger than 0x110000.
//
if (i ^ 0xD800).wrapping_sub(0x800) >= 0x110000 - 0x800 {
Err(CharTryFromError(()))
} else {
// SAFETY: checked that it's a legal unicode value
Ok(unsafe { transmute(i) })
}
}
#[stable(feature = "try_from", since = "1.34.0")]
impl TryFrom<u32> for char {
type Error = CharTryFromError;
#[inline]
fn try_from(i: u32) -> Result<Self, Self::Error> {
char_try_from_u32(i)
}
}
/// The error type returned when a conversion from [`prim@u32`] to [`prim@char`] fails.
///
/// This `struct` is created by the [`char::try_from<u32>`](char#impl-TryFrom<u32>-for-char) method.
/// See its documentation for more.
#[stable(feature = "try_from", since = "1.34.0")]
#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, PartialEq, Eq)]
pub struct CharTryFromError(());
#[stable(feature = "try_from", since = "1.34.0")]
impl fmt::Display for CharTryFromError {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
"converted integer out of range for `char`".fmt(f)
}
}
/// Converts a digit in the given radix to a `char`. See [`char::from_digit`].
#[inline]
#[must_use]
pub(super) const fn from_digit(num: u32, radix: u32) -> Option<char> {
if radix > 36 {
panic!("from_digit: radix is too high (maximum 36)");
}
if num < radix {
let num = num as u8;
if num < 10 { Some((b'0' + num) as char) } else { Some((b'a' + num - 10) as char) }
} else {
None
}
}