Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
743 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

rust - Is there a way to count with macros?

I want to create a macro that prints "Hello" a specified number of times. It's used like:

many_greetings!(3);  // expands to three `println!("Hello");` statements

The naive way to create that macro is:

macro_rules! many_greetings {
    ($times:expr) => {{
        println!("Hello");
        many_greetings!($times - 1);
    }};
    (0) => ();
}

However, this doesn't work because the compiler does not evaluate expressions; $times - 1 isn't calculated, but fed as a new expression into the macro.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Answer

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

While the ordinary macro system does not enable you to repeat the macro expansion many times, there is no problem with using a for loop in the macro:

macro_rules! many_greetings {
    ($times:expr) => {{
        for _ in 0..$times {
            println!("Hello");
        }
    }};
}

If you really need to repeat the macro, you have to look into procedural macros/compiler plugins (which as of 1.4 are unstable, and a bit harder to write).

Edit: There are probably better ways of implementing this, but I've spent long enough on this for today, so here goes. repeat!, a macro that actually duplicates a block of code a number of times:

main.rs

#![feature(plugin)]
#![plugin(repeat)]

fn main() {
    let mut n = 0;
    repeat!{ 4 {
        println!("hello {}", n);
        n += 1;
    }};
}

lib.rs

#![feature(plugin_registrar, rustc_private)]

extern crate syntax;
extern crate rustc;

use syntax::codemap::Span;
use syntax::ast::TokenTree;
use syntax::ext::base::{ExtCtxt, MacResult, MacEager, DummyResult};
use rustc::plugin::Registry;
use syntax::util::small_vector::SmallVector;
use syntax::ast::Lit_;
use std::error::Error;

fn expand_repeat(cx: &mut ExtCtxt, sp: Span, tts: &[TokenTree]) -> Box<MacResult + 'static> {
    let mut parser = cx.new_parser_from_tts(tts);
    let times = match parser.parse_lit() {
        Ok(lit) => match lit.node {
            Lit_::LitInt(n, _) => n,
            _ => {
                cx.span_err(lit.span, "Expected literal integer");
                return DummyResult::any(sp);
            }
        },
        Err(e) => {
            cx.span_err(sp, e.description());
            return DummyResult::any(sp);
        }
    };
    let res = parser.parse_block();

    match res {
        Ok(block) => {
            let mut stmts = SmallVector::many(block.stmts.clone());
            for _ in 1..times {
                let rep_stmts = SmallVector::many(block.stmts.clone());
                stmts.push_all(rep_stmts);
            }
            MacEager::stmts(stmts)
        }
        Err(e) => {
            cx.span_err(sp, e.description());
            DummyResult::any(sp)
        }
    }
}

#[plugin_registrar]
pub fn plugin_registrar(reg: &mut Registry) {
    reg.register_macro("repeat", expand_repeat);
}

added to Cargo.toml

[lib]
name = "repeat"
plugin = true

Note that if we really don't want to do looping, but expanding at compile-time, we have to do things like requiring literal numbers. After all, we are not able to evaluate variables and function calls that reference other parts of the program at compile time.


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome to OStack Knowledge Sharing Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...