pub struct DebugMap<'a, 'b: 'a> {
fmt: &'a mut Formatter<'b>,
result: Result,
has_fields: bool,
has_key: bool,
state: PadAdapterState,
}
Expand description
A struct to help with fmt::Debug
implementations.
This is useful when you wish to output a formatted map as a part of your
Debug::fmt
implementation.
This can be constructed by the Formatter::debug_map
method.
Examples
use std::fmt;
struct Foo(Vec<(String, i32)>);
impl fmt::Debug for Foo {
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
fmt.debug_map().entries(self.0.iter().map(|&(ref k, ref v)| (k, v))).finish()
}
}
assert_eq!(
format!("{:?}", Foo(vec![("A".to_string(), 10), ("B".to_string(), 11)])),
"{\"A\": 10, \"B\": 11}",
);
RunFields§
§fmt: &'a mut Formatter<'b>
§result: Result
§has_fields: bool
§has_key: bool
§state: PadAdapterState
Implementations§
source§impl<'a, 'b: 'a> DebugMap<'a, 'b>
impl<'a, 'b: 'a> DebugMap<'a, 'b>
sourcepub fn entry(&mut self, key: &dyn Debug, value: &dyn Debug) -> &mut Self
pub fn entry(&mut self, key: &dyn Debug, value: &dyn Debug) -> &mut Self
Adds a new entry to the map output.
Examples
use std::fmt;
struct Foo(Vec<(String, i32)>);
impl fmt::Debug for Foo {
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
fmt.debug_map()
.entry(&"whole", &self.0) // We add the "whole" entry.
.finish()
}
}
assert_eq!(
format!("{:?}", Foo(vec![("A".to_string(), 10), ("B".to_string(), 11)])),
"{\"whole\": [(\"A\", 10), (\"B\", 11)]}",
);
Run1.42.0 · sourcepub fn key(&mut self, key: &dyn Debug) -> &mut Self
pub fn key(&mut self, key: &dyn Debug) -> &mut Self
Adds the key part of a new entry to the map output.
This method, together with value
, is an alternative to entry
that
can be used when the complete entry isn’t known upfront. Prefer the entry
method when it’s possible to use.
Panics
key
must be called before value
and each call to key
must be followed
by a corresponding call to value
. Otherwise this method will panic.
Examples
use std::fmt;
struct Foo(Vec<(String, i32)>);
impl fmt::Debug for Foo {
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
fmt.debug_map()
.key(&"whole").value(&self.0) // We add the "whole" entry.
.finish()
}
}
assert_eq!(
format!("{:?}", Foo(vec![("A".to_string(), 10), ("B".to_string(), 11)])),
"{\"whole\": [(\"A\", 10), (\"B\", 11)]}",
);
Run1.42.0 · sourcepub fn value(&mut self, value: &dyn Debug) -> &mut Self
pub fn value(&mut self, value: &dyn Debug) -> &mut Self
Adds the value part of a new entry to the map output.
This method, together with key
, is an alternative to entry
that
can be used when the complete entry isn’t known upfront. Prefer the entry
method when it’s possible to use.
Panics
key
must be called before value
and each call to key
must be followed
by a corresponding call to value
. Otherwise this method will panic.
Examples
use std::fmt;
struct Foo(Vec<(String, i32)>);
impl fmt::Debug for Foo {
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
fmt.debug_map()
.key(&"whole").value(&self.0) // We add the "whole" entry.
.finish()
}
}
assert_eq!(
format!("{:?}", Foo(vec![("A".to_string(), 10), ("B".to_string(), 11)])),
"{\"whole\": [(\"A\", 10), (\"B\", 11)]}",
);
Runsourcepub fn entries<K, V, I>(&mut self, entries: I) -> &mut Selfwhere
K: Debug,
V: Debug,
I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, V)>,
pub fn entries<K, V, I>(&mut self, entries: I) -> &mut Selfwhere K: Debug, V: Debug, I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, V)>,
Adds the contents of an iterator of entries to the map output.
Examples
use std::fmt;
struct Foo(Vec<(String, i32)>);
impl fmt::Debug for Foo {
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
fmt.debug_map()
// We map our vec so each entries' first field will become
// the "key".
.entries(self.0.iter().map(|&(ref k, ref v)| (k, v)))
.finish()
}
}
assert_eq!(
format!("{:?}", Foo(vec![("A".to_string(), 10), ("B".to_string(), 11)])),
"{\"A\": 10, \"B\": 11}",
);
Runsourcepub fn finish(&mut self) -> Result
pub fn finish(&mut self) -> Result
Finishes output and returns any error encountered.
Panics
key
must be called before value
and each call to key
must be followed
by a corresponding call to value
. Otherwise this method will panic.
Examples
use std::fmt;
struct Foo(Vec<(String, i32)>);
impl fmt::Debug for Foo {
fn fmt(&self, fmt: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result {
fmt.debug_map()
.entries(self.0.iter().map(|&(ref k, ref v)| (k, v)))
.finish() // Ends the struct formatting.
}
}
assert_eq!(
format!("{:?}", Foo(vec![("A".to_string(), 10), ("B".to_string(), 11)])),
"{\"A\": 10, \"B\": 11}",
);
Run