//! A [TOML]-parsing library //! //! This library implements a [TOML] v0.5.0 compatible parser, //! primarily supporting the [`serde`] library for encoding/decoding //! various types in Rust. //! //! TOML itself is a simple, ergonomic, and readable configuration format: //! //! ```toml //! [package] //! name = "toml" //! version = "0.4.2" //! authors = ["Alex Crichton "] //! //! [dependencies] //! serde = "1.0" //! ``` //! //! The TOML format tends to be relatively common throughout the Rust community //! for configuration, notably being used by [Cargo], Rust's package manager. //! //! ## TOML values //! //! A value in TOML is represented with the `Value` enum in this crate: //! //! ```rust,ignore //! pub enum Value { //! String(String), //! Integer(i64), //! Float(f64), //! Boolean(bool), //! Datetime(Datetime), //! Array(Array), //! Table(Table), //! } //! ``` //! //! TOML is similar to JSON with the notable addition of a `Datetime` //! type. In general, TOML and JSON are interchangeable in terms of //! formats. //! //! ## Parsing TOML //! //! The easiest way to parse a TOML document is via the `Value` type: //! //! ```rust //! use toml::Value; //! //! let value = "foo = 'bar'".parse::().unwrap(); //! //! assert_eq!(value["foo"].as_str(), Some("bar")); //! ``` //! //! The `Value` type implements a number of convenience methods and //! traits; the example above uses `FromStr` to parse a `str` into a //! `Value`. //! //! ## Deserialization and Serialization //! //! This crate supports [`serde`] 1.0 with a number of //! implementations of the `Deserialize`, `Serialize`, `Deserializer`, and //! `Serializer` traits. Namely, you'll find: //! //! * `Deserialize for Value` //! * `Serialize for Value` //! * `Deserialize for Datetime` //! * `Serialize for Datetime` //! * `Deserializer for de::Deserializer` //! * `Serializer for ser::Serializer` //! * `Deserializer for Value` //! //! This means that you can use Serde to deserialize/serialize the //! `Value` type as well as the `Datetime` type in this crate. You can also //! use the `Deserializer`, `Serializer`, or `Value` type itself to act as //! a deserializer/serializer for arbitrary types. //! //! An example of deserializing with TOML is: //! //! ```rust //! use serde_derive::Deserialize; //! //! #[derive(Deserialize)] //! struct Config { //! ip: String, //! port: Option, //! keys: Keys, //! } //! //! #[derive(Deserialize)] //! struct Keys { //! github: String, //! travis: Option, //! } //! //! fn main() { //! let config: Config = toml::from_str(r#" //! ip = '127.0.0.1' //! //! [keys] //! github = 'xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx' //! travis = 'yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy' //! "#).unwrap(); //! //! assert_eq!(config.ip, "127.0.0.1"); //! assert_eq!(config.port, None); //! assert_eq!(config.keys.github, "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx"); //! assert_eq!(config.keys.travis.as_ref().unwrap(), "yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy"); //! } //! ``` //! //! You can serialize types in a similar fashion: //! //! ```rust //! use serde_derive::Serialize; //! //! #[derive(Serialize)] //! struct Config { //! ip: String, //! port: Option, //! keys: Keys, //! } //! //! #[derive(Serialize)] //! struct Keys { //! github: String, //! travis: Option, //! } //! //! fn main() { //! let config = Config { //! ip: "127.0.0.1".to_string(), //! port: None, //! keys: Keys { //! github: "xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx".to_string(), //! travis: Some("yyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy".to_string()), //! }, //! }; //! //! let toml = toml::to_string(&config).unwrap(); //! } //! ``` //! //! [TOML]: https://github.com/toml-lang/toml //! [Cargo]: https://crates.io/ //! [`serde`]: https://serde.rs/ #![doc(html_root_url = "https://docs.rs/toml/0.5")] #![deny(missing_docs)] #![warn(rust_2018_idioms)] pub mod map; pub mod value; #[doc(no_inline)] pub use crate::value::Value; mod datetime; pub mod ser; #[doc(no_inline)] pub use crate::ser::{to_string, to_string_pretty, to_vec, Serializer}; pub mod de; #[doc(no_inline)] pub use crate::de::{from_slice, from_str, Deserializer}; mod tokens; #[doc(hidden)] pub mod macros; mod spanned; #[doc(no_inline)] pub use crate::spanned::Spanned;