ident

A Rust utility crate for wrapping types with an immutable identifier and storing/accessing such types in collections by that identifier.

How Do I Use This Crate?

First add the crate to your Cargo.toml: toml [dependencies] ident = "*" # or the specific version you want to use. And import the crate to your own main.rs/lib.rs: ```rust extern crate ident;

use ident::*; ```

Ok, But What Does This Crate Do?

Lets say you have some type: ```rust

[derive(Clone)]

struct Foo { x: usize }

impl Foo { pub fn new(x: usize) -> Self { Self { x } } pub fn do_stuff(&mut self) { //Your code. } } And you have a collection of `Foo`s rust use std::collections::HashMap;

fn main() { let mut myfoos = HashMap::withcapacity(2); myfoos.insert(5, Foo::new(10)); myfoos.insert(10, Foo::new(5));

let mut foo = my_foos.get(&5).unwrap().clone();
foo.do_stuff();

} Its often useful to remember where you got you value from (`my_foos[5]` in this case). That would normally mean creating a new variable which you have to remember to pass everywhere but with `ident`: rust use ident::*; use std::collections::HashMap;

fn main() { let mut myfoos = HashMap::withcapacity(2); myfoos.insert(5, Foo::new(10)); myfoos.insert(10, Foo::new(5));

let mut foo = WithIdent::new(5, my_foos.get(5).unwrap().clone());
foo.do_stuff();

} ``` We are able to get the key bundled with the value while still accessing the value as if the key wasn't there.

This is a simple use case however: * Getting and Inserting with an "identifier" is implemented on standard collections. * Rust is able to infer the type of your value without your intervention. * There are several utility functions for WithIdent which allow you to manipulate the inner value or the identifier as needed.