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 theMergetrait using themerge_derivecrate.num: Enables the merge strategies in thenummodule that require thenum_traitscrate.std(default): Enables the merge strategies for thehashmapandvecthat require the standard library. If this feature is not set,merge2is ano_std.