Skip to content

squared-star/populated-rs

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

10 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Populated collections for Rust

Non-empty collection types with guaranteed 1 or more elements.

A library for working with non-empty collections i.e. populated collections. Mirrors std collections in its populated versions that guarantee always containing at least one element in the collection.

These collections are useful when you want to ensure that a collection is never empty. Any attempt to make it empty will result in a compile-time error. Also, these collections provide additional guarantees about their length and capacity, which are always non-zero. This means that you do not need to deal with Option in cases where you know that the collection will always have at least one element. For example, you call first() on a PopulatedVec and you are guaranteed to get a reference to the first element without having to deal with Option.

Safe transition to std collections when emptying a populated collection

If you invoke an operation that empties a populated collection, the library provides a safe way to transition to the corresponding std collection. For example, if you call clear() on a PopulatedVec, it will return the underlying Vec. clear() on a PopulatedVec will take ownership of the PopulatedVec and return the underlying Vec. This way any attempt to use a cleared PopulatedVec will result in a compile-time error. At the same time, you can safely and efficiently transition to the Vec when you need to.

Collections

The following std collections have been mirrored in this library:

  • VecPopulatedVec
  • SlicePopulatedSlice
  • BinaryHeapPopulatedBinaryHeap
  • HashMapPopulatedHashMap
  • HashSetPopulatedHashSet
  • BTreeMapPopulatedBTreeMap
  • BTreeSetPopulatedBTreeSet
  • VecDequePopulatedVecDeque

Examples

first() on a PopulatedVec and PopulatedSlice:

use populated::{PopulatedVec, PopulatedSlice};

let vec = PopulatedVec::new(1);
assert_eq!(vec.len().get(), 1);
assert_eq!(vec.first(), &1);

let slice = vec.as_slice();
assert_eq!(slice.len().get(), 1);
assert_eq!(slice.first(), &1);

clear() on a BTreeMap:

use populated::PopulatedBTreeMap;

let mut map = PopulatedBTreeMap::new("a", 1);
map.insert("b", 2);
assert_eq!(map.len().get(), 2);

// Safe transition to std BTreeMap on clear
let map = map.clear();
assert_eq!(map.len(), 0);