βΉοΈ This crate was superceded by cargo-expand, which added support for all the features that were missing when we started to work on cargo-inspect. Thanks all for your feedback and support.
There are only two ways to live your life.
One is as though nothing is a miracle. The other is as though everything is a miracle. -- Albert Einstein
You need Rust nightly and rustfmt
to get started.
You can install those via rustup:
rustup install nightly
rustup component add rustfmt
All set? Let's get cracking!
cargo install cargo-inspect
Call it on any Rust file:
cargo inspect main.rs
If you don't specify a file, the current crate will be analyzed instead.
cargo inspect
Depending on the size of the crate, this might take a while.
Please be patient.
It can also compare two file outputs! Try this:
cargo inspect --diff examples/range.rs,examples/range_inclusive.rs --plain
USAGE:
cargo inspect [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] [INPUT_FILE]
FLAGS:
-h, --help
Prints help information
--list-themes
Should we list all pretty printer themes?
--plain
Don't highlight output
-V, --version
Prints version information
-v, --verbose
Print the original code as a comment above the desugared code
OPTIONS:
--theme <THEME>
Specify a theme override for the pretty printer
--diff <files>
Diff input files
--format <format>
Override for the format that gets outputted when the `unpretty` mode is set to `flowgraph` [default: svg]
--unpretty <unpretty>
rustc "unpretty" parameters
*Note*: For `--unpretty=flowgraph=[symbol]` you need to have `dot` on your PATH. [default: hir]
ARGS:
<INPUT_FILE>
Input file
Rust allows for a lot of syntactic sugar, that makes it a pleasure to write. It is sometimes hard, however, to look behind the curtain and see what the compiler is really doing with our code.
To quote @tshepang, "It is good to know what these conveniences are, to avoid being mystified by what's going on under the hood... the less magical thinking we have of the world, the better."
- lifetime elisions
- type inference
- syntactic sugar
- implicit dereferencing
- type coercions
- hidden code (e.g. the prelude)
I was always interested in how programming languages work in the background, how my code was unrolled to make the compiler backend easier to maintain.
The goal is to make the compiler more approachable for mere mortals.
Mystery! Exploration! Discovery!
Read more on the background of cargo-inspect
on my blog.
Consider the following code snippet:
fn main() {
if let Some(x) = Some(1) {
// Do something with x
}
}
When you compile it, the first thing Rust does is desugar it. To see what the code looks like after this step, run
cargo inspect examples/if_let.rs
This produces the following output:
You can see that the if let
was desugared into a match
statement.
To change the colorscheme, try cargo-inspect --list-themes
, e.g.
cargo inspect examples/if_let.rs --theme GitHub
Oh, and if you have graphviz
installed, you can also print a pretty flowgraph from your code:
cargo inspect --unpretty=flowgraph=main examples/if_let.rs
Please find more examples in the examples
folder. You can also contribute
more.
The best things in the world are assembled from simple building blocks. This tool stands on the shoulders of giants. To work its magic, it runs the following commands:
rustc -Zinspect=hir
, for retrieving the HIR.rustfmt
, for formatting the output.prettyprint
, for syntax-highlighting, which is just a wrapper around the awesome syntect and bat crates.
This is a young project, which has downsides and upsides.
- Everything is in flux and things can break at any time. π«
- There's plenty of opportunity to shape and form the project. π
Thus, become a contributor today!
As of now, this is a very fragile tool. If it fails, it might will produce
horrible output. You have been warned. That said, it won't eat your code, of
course. π
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
at your option.
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