todo_by
quote
todo_by | quote | |
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2 | 3 | |
117 | 1,231 | |
- | - | |
5.8 | 7.3 | |
5 months ago | 21 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | 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.
todo_by
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todo_by: Compile-time lifetimes for comments.
Let me know what you think, and if you think you can help out with an issue that affects library authors, please share your insights!
quote
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C++ vs. Rust Build Times
A surprising source of slow compile times can be declarative macros in Rust [0].
I believe the core of the problem is that it has to reparse the code to pattern match for the macro.
One egregious patter is tt-munchers [1] where your macro is implemented recursively, requiring it to reparse the source on each call [2].
In one of my projects, someone decided to wrap a lot of core functions in simple macros (ie nt tt-munchers) to simplify the signatures. Unlike most macros which are used occasionally and have small inputs, this was a lot of input. When I refactored the code, I suspect dropping the macros is the reason CI times were cut in half and a clean `cargo check` went from 3s to 0.5s.
[0]: https://nnethercote.github.io/2022/04/12/how-to-speed-up-the...
[1]: https://veykril.github.io/tlborm/decl-macros/patterns/tt-mun...
[2]: https://github.com/dtolnay/quote/blob/31c3be473d0457e29c4f47...
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Is generating code from JSON a good macro use case?
In the build.rs, call your code generation function (probably in a separate crate added in build-dependencies). This function will read your input files, and use something like quote to generate code.
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Any good resources for learning Rust macros?
Or you can pair them with crates like syn, and quote for quasi-quoting, and then it's easy to make transformations on the AST of Rust input code. A lot of libraries do this for code-generation and hiding away a lot of complexity (example wasm-bindgen).
What are some alternatives?
syn - Parser for Rust source code
cargo-expand - Subcommand to show result of macro expansion
Constime - Zig's comptime for Rust. Mostly something to play around with until more stuff is `const` fn.
proc-macro-workshop - Learn to write Rust procedural macros [Rust Latam conference, Montevideo Uruguay, March 2019]
todo-or-die - TODOs you cannot forget!
Bytecode - A Rust proc-macro crate which derives functions to compile and parse back enums and structs to and from a bytecode representation
darling - A Rust proc-macro attribute parser
component-keycloak - Commodore Component for Keycloak
maybe-async-rs - A procedure macro to unify SYNC and ASYNC implementation for downstream application/crates
rust-fsm - Finite state machine framework for Rust with readable specifications
hickory - Command line tool for scheduling Python scripts