Rust macro to automatically implement the builder pattern for arbitrary structs. A simple #[derive(Builder)] will generate a FooBuilder for your struct Foo with all setter-methods and a build method.
use derive_builder::Builder; #[derive(Default, Builder, Debug)] #[builder(setter(into))] struct Channel { token: i32, special_info: i32, // .. a whole bunch of other fields .. } fn main() { // builder pattern, go, go, go!... let ch = ChannelBuilder::default() .special_info(42u8) .token(19124) .build() .unwrap(); println!("{:?}", ch); }
Note that we did not write any definition or implementation of ChannelBuilder. Instead the derive_builder crate acts on #[derive(Builder)] and generates the necessary code at compile time.
This is the generated boilerplate code you didn't need to write. :-)
#[derive(Clone, Default)] struct ChannelBuilder { token: Option<i32>, special_info: Option<i32>, } #[allow(dead_code)] impl ChannelBuilder { pub fn token<VALUE: Into<i32>>(&mut self, value: VALUE) -> &mut Self { let mut new = self; new.token = Some(value.into()); new } pub fn special_info<VALUE: Into<i32>>(&mut self, value: VALUE) -> &mut Self { let mut new = self; new.special_info = Some(value.into()); new } fn build( &self, ) -> Result<Channel, ChannelBuilderError> { Ok(Channel { id: match self.id { Some(ref value) => Clone::clone(value), None => { return Err( Into::into( ::derive_builder::UninitializedFieldError::from("id"), ), ) } }, token: match self.token { Some(ref value) => Clone::clone(value), None => { return Err( Into::into( ::derive_builder::UninitializedFieldError::from("token"), ), ) } }, special_info: match self.special_info { Some(ref value) => Clone::clone(value), None => { return Err( Into::into( ::derive_builder::UninitializedFieldError::from("special_info"), ), ) } }, }) } }
Note: This is edited for readability. The generated code doesn't assume traits such as Into are in-scope, and uses full paths to access them.
It's as simple as three steps:
derive_builder to your Cargo.toml either manually or with cargo-edit:cargo add derive_builderuse derive_builder::Builder;#[derive(Builder)]&mut self by default.#[builder(pattern = "owned")] or #[builder(pattern = "immutable")].#[cfg(...)] and #[allow(...)] attributes are also applied to the setter methods.#[builder(setter(skip))] on each field individually.#[builder(private)].#[builder(setter(into))], setter methods will be generic over the input types – you can then supply every argument that implements the Into trait for the field type.#[builder(setter(strip_option))], setter methods will take T as parameter'type for field of type Option<T>.#[builder(setter(each(name = "method_name")))] to fields whose types implement Default and Extend will generate a setter which adds items to the builder collection for that field. It's possible for these setters to be generic over the Into<T> trait too, like so: #[builder(setter(each(name = "foo", into)))].#[builder(field(private))] or ..(public), to set field visibility of your builder.VALUE, if you also activate setter type conversions.#[builder(default)] to delegate to the Default implementation or any explicit value via = "..". This works both on the struct and field level.#[builder(build_fn(validate = "path::to::fn"))] to add your own validation before the target struct is generated.#[builder(build_fn(skip))] to disable auto-implementation of the build method and provide your own.#[builder(build_fn(error = "path::to::Error"))] to have your builder return an error type of your choosing. By default, the macro will emit an error type alongside the builder.#[builder(derive(Trait1, Trait2, ...))] to have the builder derive additonal traits. All builders derive Default and Clone, so you should not declare those in this attribute.#[builder_struct_attr(...)], #[builder_impl_attr(...)], #[builder_field_attr(...)], and #[builder_setter_attr(...)] to declare attributes that will be added to the relevant part of the generated builder.#[builder(no_std)] to your struct, use feature alloc, and add extern crate alloc to your crate.alloc feature and then either add #[builder(no_std, build_fn(error(validation_error = false)))] or #[builder(no_std, build_fn(error = "path::to::Error"))] to your struct.#[builder(crate = "...")] to set the root for derive_builder. This is useful if you want to rename derive_builder in Cargo.toml or if your crate is re-exporting derive_builder::Builder and needs the generated code to not directly reference the derive_builder crate.For more information and examples please take a look at our documentation.
VALUE as a generic parameter as this is what all setters are using.Detailed explaination of all features and tips for troubleshooting. You'll also find a discussion of different builder patterns.
Yes, we keep a changelog.
Licensed under either of
at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.