Rust crates-io api-docs

Const equivalents of many [bytemuck] functions, and a few additional const functions.

constmuck uses bytemuck's traits, so any type that implements those traits can be used with the relevant functions from this crate.

The *_alt functions aren't exactly equivalent to the bytemuck ones, each one describes how it's different.

Examples

These examples use bytemuck's derives to show how users don't need to write unsafe to use this crate, and use the [konst] crate to make writing the const functions easier.

Contiguous

This example demonstrates constructing an enum from its representation.

```rust

use constmuck::{Contiguous, infer};

use konst::{array, try_opt};

fn main() { const COLORS: Option<[Color; 5]> = Color::fromarray([3, 4, 1, 0, 2]); asserteq!( COLORS, Some([Color::White, Color::Black, Color::Blue, Color::Red, Color::Green]), );

const NONE_COLORS: Option<[Color; 4]> = Color::from_array([1, 2, 3, 5]);
assert_eq!(NONE_COLORS, None);

}

[repr(u8)]

[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Eq, Contiguous, Copy, Clone)]

pub enum Color { Red = 0, Blue, Green, White, Black, }

impl Color { pub const fn fromint(n: u8) -> Option { constmuck::contiguous::fromu8(n, infer!()) } pub const fn fromarray(input: [u8; N]) -> Option<[Self; N]> { // try_opt returns from from_array on None, // because konst::array::map allows the passed-in expression // to return from the surrounding named function. Some(array::map!(input, |n| tryopt!(Self::from_int(n)))) } }

```

Wrapper

This example demonstrates a type that wraps a [T], constructed by reference.

```rust

use constmuck::TransparentWrapper; use constmuck::infer_tw;

fn main() { const SLICE: &[u32] = &[3, 5, 8, 13, 21]; const WRAPPER: &SliceWrapper = SliceWrapper::new(SLICE);

const SUM: u64 = WRAPPER.sum();
assert_eq!(SUM, 50);

const FIRST_EVEN: Option<(usize, u32)> = WRAPPER.find_first_even();
assert_eq!(FIRST_EVEN, Some((2, 8)));

}

[repr(transparent)]

[derive(Debug, PartialEq, Eq, TransparentWrapper)]

pub struct SliceWrapper(pub [T]);

impl SliceWrapper { // Using constmuck allows safely defining this function as a const fn pub const fn new(reff: &[T]) -> &Self { constmuck::wrapper::wrapref!(reff, infertw!()) } }

impl SliceWrapper { pub const fn sum(&self) -> u64 { let mut sum = 0; konst::forrange!{i in 0..self.0.len() => sum += self.0[i] as u64; } sum } pub const fn findfirsteven(&self) -> Option<(usize, u32)> { konst::forrange!{i in 0..self.0.len() => if self.0[i] % 2 == 0 { return Some((i, self.0[i])); } } None }

}

```

Features

These are the features of this crate:

Additional checks

The "debug_checks" feature enables additional checks, all of which cause panics when it'd have otherwise been Undefined Behavior (caused by unsound unsafe impls or calling unsafe constructor functions).

Size checks

Functions that transmute values check that the value doesn't change size when transmuted.

Functions that transmute references check that referent (the T in &T) doesn't change size when transmuted.

Macros that transmute references check that reference doesn't change size when transmuted (ie: transmuting &[u8] to &u8). Macros have weaker checking than functions because they allow references to !Sized types (eg: str, [u8], dyn Trait), if you're only casting references to Sized types it's better to use the function equivalents.

Alignment checks

All the functions in the [wrapper] module check that the alignment of the Inner type parameter is the same as the Outer type parameter, in addition to the size checks described in the previous section.

Contiguous checks

The from_* functions in the [contiguous] module check that the min_value of the passed-in ImplsContiguous is less than its max_value .

No-std support

constmuck is #![no_std], it can be used anywhere Rust can be used.

Minimum Supported Rust Version

constmuck requires Rust 1.56.0, because it uses transmute inside const fns.