Provides Merge
trait that can be used to merge structs into single by it's values:
trait Merge: Sized {
fn merge(&mut self, other: &mut Self);
}
Merge
can be derived for structs:
use merge2::Merge;
#[derive(Merge)]
struct User {
#[merge(skip)]
pub name: &'static str,
pub location: Option<&'static str>,
#[merge(strategy = ::merge2::vec::append)]
pub groups: Vec<&'static str>,
}
let mut defaults = User {
name: "",
location: Some("Internet"),
groups: vec!["rust"],
};
let mut ferris = User {
name: "Ferris",
location: None,
groups: vec!["mascot"],
};
ferris.merge(&mut defaults);
assert_eq!("Ferris", ferris.name);
assert_eq!(Some("Internet"), ferris.location);
assert_eq!(vec!["mascot", "rust"], ferris.groups);
A merge strategy is a function with the signature fn merge<T>(left: &mut T, right: &mut T)
that merges right
into left
. The merge2
crate provides strategies
for the most common types, but you can also define your own strategies.
The trait can be used to merge configuration from different sources:
environment variables, multiple configuration files and command-line
arguments, see the args.rs
example.
This crate has the following features:
derive
(default): Enables the derive macro for theMerge
trait using themerge_derive
crate.num
: Enables the merge strategies in thenum
module that require thenum_traits
crate.std
(default): Enables the merge strategies for thehashmap
andvec
that require the standard library. If this feature is not set,merge2
is ano_std
.