Units of measurement is a crate that does automatic type-safe zero-cost dimensional analysis. You can create your own systems or use the pre-built International System of Units (SI) which is based on the International System of Quantities (ISQ) and includes numerous quantities (length, mass, time, ...) with conversion factors for even more numerous measurement units (meter, kilometer, foot, mile, ...). No more crashing your climate orbiter!
uom
requires rustc
1.15.0 or later. Add this to your Cargo.toml
:
toml
[dependencies]
uom = "0.11.0"
and this to your crate root:
rust
extern crate uom;
The simple example below shows how to use quantities and units as well as how uom
stops invalid
operations.
```rust extern crate uom;
use uom::si::f32::*; use uom::si::length::kilometer; use uom::si::time::second;
fn main() { let length = Length::new(5.0, kilometer); let time = Time::new(15.0, second); let _velocity = length / time; //let error = length + time; // error[E0308]: mismatched types } ```
See the examples directory for more advanced usage:
Quantity
type aliases
for a different set of base units.Rather than working with measurement units (meter,
kilometer, foot, mile, ...) uom
works with quantities
(length, mass, time, ...). This simplifies usage because units are only involved at interface
boundaries: the rest of your code only needs to be concerned about the quantities involved. This
also makes operations on quantities (+, -, *, /, ...) have zero runtime cost1 over
using the raw storage type (e.g. f32
).
uom
normalizes values to the base unit for the quantity.
Alternative base units can be used by executing the macro defined for the system of quantities
(ISQ!
for the SI). uom
supports both f32
and f64
as the underlying storage type.
Licensed under either of
at your option.
Contributions are welcome from everyone. Submit a pull request, an issue, or just add comments to an
existing item. The International Bureau of Weights and Measures is an international
standards organization that publishes the SI Brochure. This document defines the [SI]
and can be used as a comprehensive reference for changes to uom
. Conversion factors for non-SI
units can be found in NIST Special Publication 811.
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.