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debug3

A space effiecent replacement for [std::fmt::Debug]

The Pitch

Lets say you have data that looks like this:

let complex_structure = vec![
        vec![None, Some(2)],
        vec![Some(2), None],
        vec![Some(4), Some(777)],
        vec![None, Some(2)],
        vec![Some(2), None],
        vec![None, None, None, None, None],
];

And you want to format it as a string. You could use format!("{:?}", complex_structure) and get something like

[[None, Some(2)], [Some(2), None], [Some(4), Some(777)], [None, Some(2)], [Some(2), None], [None, None, None, None, None]]

But this is too much one one line, and is hard to read. And it gets worse for larger structures.

Fortunaly theirs an alternative format!("{:#?}", complex_structure), which gives

[
    [
        None,
        Some(
            2,
        ),
    ],
    [
        Some(
            2,
        ),
        None,
    ],
    [
        Some(
            4,
        ),
        Some(
            777,
        ),
    ],
    [
        None,
        Some(
            2,
        ),
    ],
    [
        Some(
            2,
        ),
        None,
    ],
    [
        None,
        None,
        None,
        None,
        None,
    ],
]

This has the oposite problem, where it uses too much space, even when the code could be packed denser.

debug3 provides a third option that is denser than :#? but more readable than :?. If you use debug3::pprint(complex_structure), you get

[
    [None, Some(2)],
    [Some(2), None],
    [Some(4), Some(777)],
    [None, Some(2)],
    [Some(2), None],
    [None, None, None, None, None],
]

Overview

The main entrypoint is the [Debug] trait, which is the equivalent to [std::fmt::Debug], and has a similar API.

This can be either #[derive]d, or implemented manually.

use debug3::{Debug, Formatter, pprint};

#[derive(Debug)]
struct MyStruct {
    a: i32,
    b: i32,
}

struct AnotherStruct {
    a: i32,
    b: i32,
}

impl Debug for AnotherStruct {
    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut Formatter) {
        f.debug_struct("AnotherStruct")
            .field("a", &self.a)
            .field("b", &self.b)
            .finish()
    }
}

assert_eq!(pprint(MyStruct { a: 1, b: 2 }), "MyStruct { a: 1, b: 2 }");
assert_eq!(pprint(AnotherStruct { a: 1, b: 2 }), "AnotherStruct { a: 1, b: 2 }");

Once your type implements [Debug], you have several options to format it

  • [pprint]: Convert it to a [String]
  • [dbg]: Print it to stderr

Comparison to std::fmt::Debug:

While the main advantage of debug3 is the superior output quality, it has several drawbacks compared to [std::fmt] that you should know

  1. Commonness: Virtually every type in Rust implements [std::fmt::Debug], vitrualy no types outside of [std] implement [debug3::Debug][Debug].
  2. Availibility: [std::fmt] is also availible as [core::fmt], which allows you to use it in no_std environments. debug3 requires several allocated data structures, so cannot support these environments.
  3. Versitility: [std::fmt::Formatter] has many more API's for implementing [std::fmt::Debug]. In order to achive nice formatting, we cannot accept arbitrary strings, but must have items in the form of Structs, Tuples, Maps, Lists and Sets.
  4. Configurabiliy: We dont suport stuff like format!("{:x?}, 1) to configure how numbers are printed.
  5. Ease of use: We don't have a macro like [std::format] to easily create a string from several elements which implement [Debug]

Prior Art

debug3 would not be possible without all of the following excelent work

  • core::fmt - The public API of [Formatter] and [builders]
  • prettyplease - Most of the prety printing algorithm is lifted directly from this crate
  • custom_debug - The derive macro for [Debug] is based on this crate.
  • python's pprint - Inspiration for this type of formatting for debug output.

License

Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

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