Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to create a static string at compile time

Tags:

rust

I want to create a long &'static str made of repeating sequences of chars, e.g. abcabcabc...

Is there a way in Rust to do this via an expression, e.g. something like long_str = 1000 * "abc" in Python, or do I have to generate it in Python and copy/paste it in the Rust code?

like image 782
mhristache Avatar asked Oct 05 '15 19:10

mhristache


2 Answers

You cannot do such a thing in stable Rust. Your example of 1000 * "abc" is not run at "compile time" in Python either, as far as I understand Python.

Including a file

If it has to be static, you could use a Cargo build script. This is a bit of Rust code that can do lots of things before your code is actually compiled. Specifically, you could write a source file out that has your string and then use include_str! to bring it into your crate:

build.rs

use std::{     env, error::Error, fs::File, io::{BufWriter, Write}, path::Path, };  fn main() -> Result<(), Box<Error>> {     let out_dir = env::var("OUT_DIR")?;     let dest_path = Path::new(&out_dir).join("long_string.txt");     let mut f = BufWriter::new(File::create(&dest_path)?);      let long_string = "abc".repeat(100);     write!(f, "{}", long_string)?;      Ok(()) } 

lib.rs

static LONG_STRING: &'static str = include_str!(concat!(env!("OUT_DIR"), "/long_string.txt")); 

Lazy initialization

You could create a once_cell or lazy_static value that would create your string at runtime, but only once.

use once_cell::sync::Lazy; // 1.5.2  static LONG_STR: Lazy<String> = Lazy::new(|| "abc".repeat(5000)); 

See also:

  • How can you make a safe static singleton in Rust?
  • How do I create a global, mutable singleton?

The far future

At some point, RFC 911 will be fully implemented. This, plus a handful of additional RFCs, each adding new functionality, will allow you to be able to write something like:

// Does not work yet! static LONG_STR: String = "abc".repeat(1000); 
like image 164
Shepmaster Avatar answered Sep 19 '22 22:09

Shepmaster


There are quite a few ways to do that. You could load a pre-generated string from file if you like:

const DATA: &'static str = include_str!("filename.txt");

Or to do it during compilation you can use concat!:

const DATA: &'static str = concat!("abc", "abc");
like image 20
Lukas Kalbertodt Avatar answered Sep 19 '22 22:09

Lukas Kalbertodt