Crate core [−] [src]
The Rust Core Library
The Rust Core Library is the dependency-free1 foundation of The Rust Standard Library. It is the portable glue between the language and its libraries, defining the intrinsic and primitive building blocks of all Rust code. It links to no upstream libraries, no system libraries, and no libc.
The core library is minimal: it isn't even aware of heap allocation, nor does it provide concurrency or I/O. These things require platform integration, and this library is platform-agnostic.
It is not recommended to use the core library. The stable functionality of libcore is reexported from the standard library. The composition of this library is subject to change over time; only the interface exposed through libstd is intended to be stable.
How to use the core library
This library is built on the assumption of a few existing symbols:
memcpy
,memcmp
,memset
- These are core memory routines which are often generated by LLVM. Additionally, this library can make explicit calls to these functions. Their signatures are the same as found in C. These functions are often provided by the system libc, but can also be provided by the rlibc crate.rust_begin_unwind
- This function takes three arguments, afmt::Arguments
, a&str
, and au32
. These three arguments dictate the panic message, the file at which panic was invoked, and the line. It is up to consumers of this core library to define this panic function; it is only required to never return.
-
Strictly speaking, there are some symbols which are needed but they aren't always necessary. ↩
Modules
any |
This module implements the |
borrow |
A module for working with borrowed data. |
cell |
Shareable mutable containers. |
char |
Character manipulation. |
clone |
The |
cmp |
Functionality for ordering and comparison. |
convert |
Traits for conversions between types. |
default |
The |
f32 |
Operations and constants for 32-bits floats ( |
f64 |
Operations and constants for 64-bits floats ( |
fmt |
Utilities for formatting and printing strings |
hash |
Generic hashing support. |
i16 |
The 16-bit signed integer type. |
i32 |
The 32-bit signed integer type. |
i64 |
The 64-bit signed integer type. |
i8 |
The 8-bit signed integer type. |
isize |
The pointer-sized signed integer type. |
iter |
Composable external iteration |
marker |
Primitive traits and marker types representing basic 'kinds' of types. |
mem |
Basic functions for dealing with memory |
num |
Numeric traits and functions for the built-in numeric types. |
ops |
Overloadable operators |
option |
Optional values |
prelude |
The libcore prelude |
ptr |
Raw, unsafe pointers, |
result |
Error handling with the |
slice |
Slice management and manipulation |
str |
String manipulation |
sync |
Synchronization primitives |
u16 |
The 16-bit unsigned integer type. |
u32 |
The 32-bit unsigned integer type. |
u64 |
The 64-bit unsigned integer type. |
u8 |
The 8-bit unsigned integer type. |
usize |
The pointer-sized unsigned integer type. |
array |
[Unstable] Implementations of things like |
intrinsics |
[Unstable] rustc compiler intrinsics. |
nonzero |
[Unstable] Exposes the NonZero lang item which provides optimization hints. |
panicking |
[Unstable] Panic support for libcore |
raw |
[Unstable] Contains struct definitions for the layout of compiler built-in types. |
simd |
[Deprecated] SIMD vectors. |
Macros
assert! |
Ensure that a boolean expression is |
assert_eq! |
Asserts that two expressions are equal to each other. |
debug_assert! |
Ensure that a boolean expression is |
debug_assert_eq! |
Asserts that two expressions are equal to each other, testing equality in both directions. |
panic! |
Entry point of thread panic, for details, see std::macros |
try! |
Helper macro for unwrapping |
unimplemented! |
A standardized placeholder for marking unfinished code. It panics with the
message |
unreachable! |
A utility macro for indicating unreachable code. |
write! |
Use the |
writeln! |
Use the |