macro_rules! bitflags { ( $(#[$outer:meta])* $vis:vis struct $BitFlags:ident: $T:ty { $( $(#[$inner:ident $($args:tt)*])* const $Flag:ident = $value:expr; )* } $($t:tt)* ) => { ... }; () => { ... }; }
Expand description
The macro used to generate the flag structures.
See the crate level docs for complete documentation.
Example
use bitflags::bitflags;
bitflags! {
struct Flags: u32 {
const A = 0b00000001;
const B = 0b00000010;
const C = 0b00000100;
const ABC = Self::A.bits | Self::B.bits | Self::C.bits;
}
}
fn main() {
let e1 = Flags::A | Flags::C;
let e2 = Flags::B | Flags::C;
assert_eq!((e1 | e2), Flags::ABC); // union
assert_eq!((e1 & e2), Flags::C); // intersection
assert_eq!((e1 - e2), Flags::A); // set difference
assert_eq!(!e2, Flags::A); // set complement
}
The generated struct
s can also be extended with type and trait
implementations:
use std::fmt;
use bitflags::bitflags;
bitflags! {
struct Flags: u32 {
const A = 0b00000001;
const B = 0b00000010;
}
}
impl Flags {
pub fn clear(&mut self) {
self.bits = 0; // The `bits` field can be accessed from within the
// same module where the `bitflags!` macro was invoked.
}
}
impl fmt::Display for Flags {
fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
write!(f, "hi!")
}
}
fn main() {
let mut flags = Flags::A | Flags::B;
flags.clear();
assert!(flags.is_empty());
assert_eq!(format!("{}", flags), "hi!");
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", Flags::A | Flags::B), "A | B");
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", Flags::B), "B");
}