log
regex
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log | regex | |
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28 | 91 | |
2,055 | 3,345 | |
2.7% | 1.8% | |
8.6 | 9.1 | |
24 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
log
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What Are The Rust Crates You Use In Almost Every Project That They Are Practically An Extension of The Standard Library?
log: Logging interface with various levels.
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How easy is it to swap out your async runtime?
Depends on your logging crate. log does not depend on any async runtime.
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log is going to bump msrv to 1.60
See the corresponing PR: https://github.com/rust-lang/log/pull/543
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Rust and its friendly crates: Don't miss out on them!
log
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Colorful logging with pizzazz!
It's a for-fun project that provides a configurable implementation for the log crate. This language and community is awesome, and I hope some of you get a kick out of this!
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Ergonomic logging?
Firstly I would start by taking a look at how crates using log actually resolve this. Particularly the set_boxed_logger which simply calls Box::leak.
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Logging Crate for CLI?
You might want to look at log and simple_log.
- Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here! (36/2022)!
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Rust playground on iOS
4) Another route that I tried is to develop a simple terminal app using SwiftUI with a Xcode project to build that app + link against a Rust library compiled for iOS with the actual logic. I used swift-bridge for this and it works really well, to the point where I have a custom logger that you can simply use the print stuff to SwiftUI from Rust using the log crate. Once I have a bit more time, I will probably try figuring out how to clean this up a bit more.
regex
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Zed is now open source
The homepage has a benchmark that compares Zed's "insertion latency" to other editors, and this is the description:
> Open input.rs at the end of line 21 in rust-lang/regex. Type z 10 times, measure how long it takes for each z to display since hitting the z key.
Could someone clarify what that means? My interpretation of that was to go to https://github.com/rust-lang/regex/blob/master/regex-cli/arg... and start typing 'z' at the end of line 21, but that doesn't seem to make any sense. I guess that repo got refactored and those instructions are out of date?
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CryptoFlow: Building a secure and scalable system with Axum and SvelteKit - Part 3
We also used the avenue to sluggify the question title. We used regex to fish out and replace all occurrences of punctuation and symbol characters with an empty string and using the itertools crate, we joined the words back together into a single string, where each word is separated by a hyphen ("-").
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Command Line Rust is a great book
Command-Line Rust taught me how to use crates like clap, assert_cmd, and regex. I felt lost before because I didn't know about Rust's ecosystem--which is arguably as important as the language itself. Also, looking up and comparing libraries is a tiring task! blessed.rs is nice but Command-Line Rust really saved me from analysis paralysis.
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Common Rust Lifetime Misconceptions
burntsushi actually regrets making regex replace return a Cow: https://github.com/rust-lang/regex/issues/676#issuecomment-6.... I’m glad it does, and wish it took an impl Into> there, for the reasons discussed in the issue, but burntsushi has a lot more experience of the practical outcomes of this. Just something more to think about.
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Advent of Code 2023 is nigh
I'm not familiar with the AoC problem. You might be able to. But RegexSet doesn't give you match offsets.
You can drop down to regex-automata, which does let you do multi-regex search and it will tell you which patterns match[1]. The docs have an example of a simple lexer[2]. But... that will only give you non-overlapping matches.
You can drop down to an even lower level of abstraction and get multi-pattern overlapping matches[3], but it's awkward. The comment there explains that I had initially tried to provide a higher level API for it, but was unsure of what the semantics should be. Getting the starting position in particular is a bit of a wrinkle.
[1]: https://docs.rs/regex-automata/latest/regex_automata/meta/in...
[2]: https://docs.rs/regex-automata/latest/regex_automata/meta/st...
[3]: https://github.com/rust-lang/regex/blob/837fd85e79fac2a4ea64...
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Text Showdown: Gap Buffers vs. Ropes
It’s not quite that simple, but folks are working on it.
https://github.com/rust-lang/regex/issues/425#issuecomment-1...
https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/pull/211#issuecomment-...
- Please ask questions (rust-lang/regex)
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ScripterC - Rust-lang set
Dependencies used: - regex - unicode_reader - rust decimal - tokio
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Regex Engine Internals as a Library
https://www.cs.princeton.edu/courses/archive/fall19/cos226/l... and https://kean.blog/post/lets-build-regex are excellent introductions to implementing a (very) simplified regex engine: construct a nondetermistic finite state automaton for the regex, then perform a graph search on the resulting digraph; if the vertex corresponding to your end state is reachable, you have a match.
I think this exercise is valuable for anyone writing regexes to not only understand that there's less magic than one might think, but also to visualize a bunch of balls bouncing along an NFA - that bug you inevitably hit in production due to catastrophic backtracking now takes on a physical meaning!
Separately re: the OP, https://github.com/rust-lang/regex/issues/822 (and specifically BurntSushi's comment at the very end of the issue) adds really useful context to the paragraph in the OP about niche APIs: https://blog.burntsushi.net/regex-internals/#problem-request... - searching with multiple regexes simultaneously against a text is both incredibly complex and incredibly useful, and I can't wait to see what the community comes up with for this pattern!
What are some alternatives?
slog - Structured, contextual, extensible, composable logging for Rust
re2 - modern regular expression syntax everywhere with a painless upgrade path [Moved to: https://github.com/SonOfLilit/kleenexp]
tracing - Application level tracing for Rust.
node-re2 - node.js bindings for RE2: fast, safe alternative to backtracking regular expression engines.
log4rs - A highly configurable logging framework for Rust
zig - General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
rust-simple_logger - A rust logger that prints all messages with a readable output format.
ngrams - (Read-only) Generate n-grams
env_logger - A logging implementation for `log` which is configured via an environment variable.
regex-benchmark - It's just a simple regex benchmark of different programming languages.
async-anyhow-logger - An easy crate for catching anyhow errors from an asynchronous function, and passing them to your logger
whatlang-rs - Natural language detection library for Rust. Try demo online: https://whatlang.org/