si-scale

crate documentation minimum rustc 1.8 build status

Format value with units according to SI (système international d’unités).

Version requirement: rustc 1.50+

toml [dependencies] si-scale = "0.1"

Getting started

This crate parses and formats numbers using the SI Scales: from 1 y (yocto, i.e. 1e-24) to 1 Y (Yotta, i.e. 1e24). It is essentially agnostic of units per-se; you can totally keep representing units with strings or uom, or something else.

Pre-defined helper functions

You can use one of the predefined helper functions to format numbers:

```rust use si_scale::helpers::{seconds, seconds3};

let actual = format!("{}", seconds(1.3e-5)); let expected = "13 µs"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("{}", seconds3(1.3e-5)); let expected = "13.000 µs"; assert_eq!(actual, expected); ```

Currently the helper functions are:

| helper fn | mantissa | prefix constraint | base | groupings | example | | --- | -- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | number_() | "{}" | UnitOnly | B1000 | _ | 1.234567, 16 | | --- | -- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | seconds() | "{}" | UnitAndBelow | B1000 | none | 1.234567 µs, 16 ms | | seconds3() | "{:.3}" | UnitAndBelow | B1000 | none | 1.235 µs, 16.000 ms| | --- | -- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | bytes() | "{}" | UnitAndAbove | B1000 | _ | 1.234_567 kB | | bytes_() | "{}" | UnitOnly | B1000 | _ | 1_234_567 B | | bytes1() | "{:.1}" | UnitAndAbove | B1000 | none | 2.3 TB | | --- | -- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | bibytes() | "{}" | UnitAndAbove | B1024 | _ | 1.234_567 MiB | | bibytes1() | "{:.1}" | UnitAndAbove | B1024 | none | 1.2 GiB |

Custom helper functions

To define your own format function, use the scale_fn!() macro. All pre-defined helper functions from this crate are defined using this macro.

For instance, let's define a formatting function for bits per sec which prints the mantissa with 2 decimals, and also uses base 1024 (where 1 ki = 1024). Note that although we define the function in a separate module, this is not a requirement.

```rust mod unitfmt { use siscale::scalefn; use siscale::prelude::Value;

// defines the `bits_per_sec()` function
scale_fn!(bits_per_sec,
          base: B1024,
          constraint: UnitAndAbove,
          mantissa_fmt: "{:.2}",
          groupings: '_',
          unit: "bit/s");

}

use unitfmt::bitsper_sec;

fn main() { let x = 2.1 * 1024 as f32; let actual = format!("throughput: {:>15}", bitspersec(x)); let expected = "throughput: 2.10 kibit/s"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let x = 2;
let actual = format!("throughput: {}", bits_per_sec(x));
let expected = "throughput: 2.00 bit/s";
assert_eq!(actual, expected);

}

```

You can omit the groupings argument of the macro to not separate thousands.

SI Scales

With base = 1000, 1k = 1000, 1M = 1_000_000, 1m = 0.001, 1µ = 0.000_001, etc.

| min (incl.) | max (excl.) | magnitude | prefix | | --- | --- | --- | ---- | | .. | .. | -24 | Prefix::Yocto | | .. | .. | -21 | Prefix::Zepto | | .. | .. | -18 | Prefix::Atto | | .. | .. | -15 | Prefix::Femto | | .. | .. | -12 | Prefix::Pico | | .. | .. | -9 | Prefix::Nano | | 0.000_001 | 0.001 | -6 | Prefix::Micro | | 0.001 | 1 | -3 | Prefix::Milli | | 1 | 1_000 | 0 | Prefix::Unit | | 1000 | 1_000_000 | 3 | Prefix::Kilo | | 1_000_000 | 1_000_000_000 | 6 | Prefix::Mega | | .. | .. | 9 | Prefix::Giga | | .. | .. | 12 | Prefix::Tera | | .. | .. | 15 | Prefix::Peta | | .. | .. | 18 | Prefix::Exa | | .. | .. | 21 | Prefix::Zetta | | .. | .. | 24 | Prefix::Yotta |

The base is usually 1000, but can also be 1024 (bibytes).

With base = 1024, 1ki = 1024, 1Mi = 1024 * 1024, etc.

Overview

The central representation is the Value type, which holds

This crate provides 2 APIs: a low-level API, and a high-level API for convenience.

For the low-level API, the typical use case is

For the high-level API, the typical use cases are

  1. parse and display a number using the provided functions such as bibytes(), bytes() or seconds(), they will choose for each number the most appropriate SI scale.

  2. In case you want the same control granularity as the low-level API (e.g. constraining the scale in some way, using some base, specific mantissa formatting), then you can build a custom function using the provided macro scale_fn!(). The existing functions such as bibytes(), bytes(), seconds() are all built using this same macro.

The high-level API

The seconds3() function parses a number into a Value and displays it using 3 decimals and the appropriate scale for seconds (UnitAndBelow), so that non-sensical scales such as kilo-seconds can't be output. The seconds() function does the same but formats the mantissa with the default "{}", so no decimals are printed for integer mantissa.

```rust use si_scale::helpers::{seconds, seconds3};

let actual = format!("result is {:>15}", seconds(1234.5678)); let expected = "result is 1234.5678 s"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("result is {:>10}", seconds3(12.3e-7)); let expected = "result is 1.230 µs"; assert_eq!(actual, expected); ```

The bytes() function parses a number into a Value using base 1000 and displays it using 1 decimal and the appropriate scale for bytes (UnitAndAbove), so that non-sensical scales such as milli-bytes may not appear.

```rust use si_scale::helpers::{bytes, bytes1};

let actual = format!("result is {}", bytes1(12345678)); let expected = "result is 12.3 MB"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("result is {:>10}", bytes(16)); let expected = "result is 16 B"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("result is {}", bytes(0.12)); let expected = "result is 0.12 B"; assert_eq!(actual, expected); ```

The bibytes1() function parses a number into a Value using base 1024 and displays it using 1 decimal and the appropriate scale for bytes (UnitAndAbove), so that non-sensical scales such as milli-bytes may not appear.

```rust use si_scale::helpers::{bibytes, bibytes1};

let actual = format!("result is {}", bibytes1(12345678)); let expected = "result is 11.8 MiB"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("result is {}", bibytes(16 * 1024)); let expected = "result is 16 kiB"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("result is {:>10}", bibytes1(16)); let expected = "result is 16.0 B"; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual = format!("result is {}", bibytes(0.12)); let expected = "result is 0.12 B"; assert_eq!(actual, expected); ```

The low-level API

Creating a Value with Value::new()

The low-level function Value::new() converts any number convertible to f64 into a Value using base 1000. The Value struct implements From for common numbers and delegates to Value::new(), so they are equivalent in practice. Here are a few examples.

```rust use std::convert::From; use si_scale::prelude::*;

let actual = Value::from(0.123); let expected = Value { mantissa: 123f64, prefix: Prefix::Milli, base: Base::B1000, }; asserteq!(actual, expected); asserteq!(Value::new(0.123), expected);

let actual: Value = 0.123.into(); assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual: Value = 1300i32.into(); let expected = Value { mantissa: 1.3f64, prefix: Prefix::Kilo, base: Base::B1000, }; assert_eq!(actual, expected);

let actual: Vec = vec![0.123f64, -1.5e28] .iter().map(|n| n.into()).collect(); let expected = vec![ Value { mantissa: 123f64, prefix: Prefix::Milli, base: Base::B1000, }, Value { mantissa: -1.5e4f64, prefix: Prefix::Yotta, base: Base::B1000, }, ]; assert_eq!(actual, expected); ```

As you can see in the last example, values which scale are outside of the SI prefixes are represented using the closest SI prefix.

Creating a Value with Value::new_with()

The low-level Value::new_with() operates similarly to Value::new() but also expects a base and a constraint on the scales you want to use. In comparison with the simple Value::new(), this allows base 1024 scaling (for kiB, MiB, etc) and preventing upper scales for seconds or lower scales for integral units such as bytes (e.g. avoid writing 1300 sec as 1.3 ks or 0.415 B as 415 mB).

```rust use si_scale::prelude::*;

// Assume this is seconds, no kilo-seconds make sense. let actual = Value::newwith(1234, Base::B1000, Constraint::UnitAndBelow); let expected = Value { mantissa: 1234f64, prefix: Prefix::Unit, base: Base::B1000, }; asserteq!(actual, expected); ```

Don't worry yet about the verbosity, the following parser helps with this.

Formatting values

In this example, the number x is converted into a value and displayed using the most appropriate SI prefix. The user chose to constrain the prefix to be anything lower than Unit (1) because kilo-seconds make no sense.

```rust use siscale::formatvalue; use si_scale::{value::Value, base::Base, prefix::Constraint};

let x = 1234.5678; let v = Value::new_with(x, Base::B1000, Constraint::UnitAndBelow); let unit = "s";

let actual = format!( "result is {}{u}", formatvalue!(v, "{:.5}", groupings: ''), u = unit ); let expected = "result is 1234.56780 s"; assert_eq!(actual, expected); ```

Run code-coverage

Install the llvm-tools-preview component and grcov

sh rustup component add llvm-tools-preview cargo install grcov

Install nightly

sh rustup toolchain install nightly

The following make invocation will switch to nigthly run the tests using Cargo, and output coverage HTML report in ./coverage/

sh make coverage

The coverage report is located in ./coverage/index.html

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.