rustc/vendor/smol_str-0.3.2
2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
..
src New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
tests New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
.cargo-checksum.json New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
bors.toml New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
Cargo.toml New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
CHANGELOG.md New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
LICENSE-APACHE New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
LICENSE-MIT New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00
README.md New upstream version 1.84.0+dfsg1 2025-01-11 15:57:26 +01:00

smol_str

CI Crates.io API reference

A SmolStr is a string type that has the following properties:

  • size_of::<SmolStr>() == 24 (therefore == size_of::<String>() on 64 bit platforms)
  • Clone is O(1)
  • Strings are stack-allocated if they are:
    • Up to 23 bytes long
    • Longer than 23 bytes, but substrings of WS (see src/lib.rs). Such strings consist solely of consecutive newlines, followed by consecutive spaces
  • If a string does not satisfy the aforementioned conditions, it is heap-allocated
  • Additionally, a SmolStr can be explicitly created from a &'static str without allocation

Unlike String, however, SmolStr is immutable. The primary use case for SmolStr is a good enough default storage for tokens of typical programming languages. Strings consisting of a series of newlines, followed by a series of whitespace are a typical pattern in computer programs because of indentation. Note that a specialized interner might be a better solution for some use cases.

MSRV Policy

Minimal Supported Rust Version: latest stable.

Bumping MSRV is not considered a semver-breaking change.