seq!
A seq!
macro to repeat a fragment of source code and substitute into each
repetition a sequential numeric counter.
[dependencies]
seq-macro = "0.3"
use seq_macro::seq;
fn main() {
let tuple = (1000, 100, 10);
let mut sum = 0;
// Expands to:
//
// sum += tuple.0;
// sum += tuple.1;
// sum += tuple.2;
//
// This cannot be written using an ordinary for-loop because elements of
// a tuple can only be accessed by their integer literal index, not by a
// variable.
seq!(N in 0..=2 {
sum += tuple.N;
});
assert_eq!(sum, 1110);
}
-
If the input tokens contain a section surrounded by
#(
...)*
then only that part is repeated. -
The numeric counter can be pasted onto the end of some prefix to form sequential identifiers.
use seq_macro::seq;
seq!(N in 64..=127 {
#[derive(Debug)]
enum Demo {
// Expands to Variant64, Variant65, ...
#(
Variant~N,
)*
}
});
fn main() {
assert_eq!("Variant99", format!("{:?}", Demo::Variant99));
}
-
Byte and character ranges are supported:
b'a'..=b'z'
,'a'..='z'
. -
If the range bounds are written in binary, octal, hex, or with zero padding, those features are preserved in any generated tokens.
use seq_macro::seq;
seq!(P in 0x000..=0x00F {
// expands to structs Pin000, ..., Pin009, Pin00A, ..., Pin00F
struct Pin~P;
});
Licensed under either of LicenseApache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.