This crate provides a procedural macro for indented string literals. The
indoc!()
macro takes a multiline string literal and un-indents it so the
leftmost non-space character is in the first column.
toml
[dependencies]
indoc = "0.2"
Release notes are available under GitHub releases.
```rust
extern crate indoc;
fn main() { let testing = indoc!(" def hello(): print('Hello, world!')
hello()
");
let expected = "def hello():\n print('Hello, world!')\n\nhello()\n";
assert_eq!(testing, expected);
} ```
Indoc also works with raw string literals:
```rust
extern crate indoc;
fn main() { let testing = indoc!(r#" def hello(): print("Hello, world!")
hello()
"#);
let expected = "def hello():\n print(\"Hello, world!\")\n\nhello()\n";
assert_eq!(testing, expected);
} ```
And byte string literals:
```rust
extern crate indoc;
fn main() { let testing = indoc!(b" def hello(): print('Hello, world!')
hello()
");
let expected = b"def hello():\n print('Hello, world!')\n\nhello()\n";
assert_eq!(testing[..], expected[..]);
} ```
The following rules characterize the behavior of the indoc!()
macro:
This means there are a few equivalent ways to format the same string, so choose
one you like. All of the following result in the string "line one\nline
two\n"
:
indoc!(" / indoc!( / indoc!("line one
line one / "line one / line two
line two / line two / ")
") / ") /
Indoc's indentation logic is available in the unindent
crate. This may be
useful for processing strings that are not statically known at compile time.
The crate exposes two functions:
unindent(&str) -> String
unindent_bytes(&[u8]) -> Vec<u8>
```rust extern crate unindent; use unindent::unindent;
fn main() { let indented = " line one line two"; assert_eq!("line one\nline two", unindent(indented)); } ```
Licensed under either of
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in Indoc by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.