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This library provides an ergonomic experience of adding debugging messages to rust's Result<T,E> and Option<T>`patterns

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macrofied-toolbox

This library provides an ergonomic experience of adding debugging messages to rust's Result<T,E> and Option<T> patterns

Just like the cli-toolbox crate, that the debug logic resembles, this is not a logging alternative; it's intended to produce debugging output to be used during application development.

Although the macros were designed to make debugging more ergonomic, they include variations that do not include debugging to provide coding consistency, so you have the option to use the same syntax consistently throughout your project.

Result<T,E>

use std::fs::File;
use std::io;
use std::io::{BufWriter, Write};
use macrofied_toolbox::result;

fn main() -> io::Result<()> {
    let file_name = "foo.txt";

    // attempts to create a file
    result! {
        // * if you use the try "?" punctuation, the result! macro will
        //   still output debug or error before returning the Result::Err
        @when  File::create(file_name)?;
        // if the file is successfully created, write some content
        @ok    (file) => {
            let mut out = BufWriter::new(file);

            writeln!(out, "some content")?;
            writeln!(out, "some more content")?;
        }
        // if an exception occurs output debug message to stdout
        @debug "problem creating file: {:?} - {}", file_name, err

        // * debug messages are conditionally compiled
        //   and do not output anything in release builds
        // * "err" contains the Result::Err value and can be optionally referenced,
        //   it is discarded if it is not referenced
    }

    Ok(())
}

Option<T>

use std::fs::File;
use std::io;
use std::io::{BufWriter, Write};
use std::process::exit;

use macrofied_toolbox::option;

fn main() {
    let file_name = "foo.txt";

    if let None = example(file_name) {
        eprintln!("failed to create {:?} file!", file_name);
        exit(-1);
    }
}

fn example(file_name: &str) -> Option<()> {
    // attempts to create a file
    option! {
        // * if you use the try "?" punctuation, the result! macro will
        //   still output debug or error before returning the Result::Err
        @when  File::create(file_name).ok()?;
        // if the file is successfully created, write some content
        @some  (file) => {
            let mut out = BufWriter::new(file);

            writeln!(out, "some content").ok()?;
            writeln!(out, "some more content").ok()?;
        }
        // if an exception occurs output debug message to stdout
        @debug "problem creating file: {:?}", file_name

        // * debug messages are conditionally compiled
        //   and do not output anything in release builds
        // * "err" contains the Result::Err value and can be optionally referenced,
        //   it is discarded if it is not referenced
    }

    Some(())
}

Resources

  • Docs for more detailed information
  • Examples to see it in action

Usage

Each macro is gated by a feature; all, option or result respectively.

  • option! macro
[dependencies]
macrofied-toolbox = { version = "0.4", features = ["option"] }
  • result! macro
[dependencies]
macrofied-toolbox = { version = "0.4", features = ["result"] }

Features

Although macrofied-toolbox was designed to make adding debugging output more ergonomic, the generation of debug output is gated by an optional X-debug feature for maximum flexibility.

* Debug output is only effective in unoptimized builds *

  • all-debug - enables console debugging and both features
  • option-debug - enables console debugging and the option! macro
  • result-debug - enables console debugging and the result! macro

Roadmap

  • logging for both Ok<T> and Err<E>
  • other patterns?

Implemented

  • result! - handles a Result<T,E> expression
  • option! - handles an Option<T> expression
  • support reference/mutable Ok<T> and Some<T> values

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This library provides an ergonomic experience of adding debugging messages to rust's Result<T,E> and Option<T>`patterns

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