Files
swift-mirror/stdlib/public/core/StringInterpolation.swift
Michael Ilseman 4ab45dfe20 [String] Drop in initial UTF-8 String prototype
This is a giant squashing of a lot of individual changes prototyping a
switch of String in Swift 5 to be natively encoded as UTF-8. It
includes what's necessary for a functional prototype, dropping some
history, but still leaves plenty of history available for future
commits.

My apologies to anyone trying to do code archeology between this
commit and the one prior. This was the lesser of evils.
2018-11-04 10:42:40 -08:00

257 lines
9.7 KiB
Swift

//===--- StringInterpolation.swift - String Interpolation -----------------===//
//
// This source file is part of the Swift.org open source project
//
// Copyright (c) 2014 - 2017 Apple Inc. and the Swift project authors
// Licensed under Apache License v2.0 with Runtime Library Exception
//
// See https://swift.org/LICENSE.txt for license information
// See https://swift.org/CONTRIBUTORS.txt for the list of Swift project authors
//
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
/// Represents a string literal with interpolations while it is being built up.
///
/// Do not create an instance of this type directly. It is used by the compiler
/// when you create a string using string interpolation. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = """
/// If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, \
/// \(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars.
/// """
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
///
/// When implementing an `ExpressibleByStringInterpolation` conformance,
/// set the `StringInterpolation` associated type to
/// `DefaultStringInterpolation` to get the same interpolation behavior as
/// Swift's built-in `String` type and construct a `String` with the results.
/// If you don't want the default behavior or don't want to construct a
/// `String`, use a custom type conforming to `StringInterpolationProtocol`
/// instead.
///
/// Extending default string interpolation behavior
/// ===============================================
///
/// Code outside the standard library can extend string interpolation on
/// `String` and many other common types by extending
/// `DefaultStringInterpolation` and adding an `appendInterpolation(...)`
/// method. For example:
///
/// extension DefaultStringInterpolation {
/// fileprivate mutating func appendInterpolation(
/// escaped value: String, asASCII forceASCII: Bool = false) {
/// for char in value.unicodeScalars {
/// appendInterpolation(char.escaped(asASCII: forceASCII)
/// }
/// }
/// }
///
/// print("Escaped string: \(escaped: string)")
///
/// See `StringInterpolationProtocol` for details on `appendInterpolation`
/// methods.
///
/// `DefaultStringInterpolation` extensions should add only `mutating` members
/// and should not copy `self` or capture it in an escaping closure.
@_fixed_layout
public struct DefaultStringInterpolation: StringInterpolationProtocol {
/// The string contents accumulated by this instance.
@usableFromInline
internal var _storage: String
/// Creates a string interpolation with storage pre-sized for a literal
/// with the indicated attributes.
///
/// Do not call this initializer directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// interpreting string interpolations.
@inlinable
public init(literalCapacity: Int, interpolationCount: Int) {
let capacityPerInterpolation = 2
let initialCapacity = literalCapacity +
interpolationCount * capacityPerInterpolation
_storage = String(_StringGuts(_initialCapacity: initialCapacity))
}
/// Appends a literal segment of a string interpolation.
///
/// Do not call this method directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// interpreting string interpolations.
@inlinable
public mutating func appendLiteral(_ literal: String) {
literal.write(to: &self)
}
/// Interpolates the given value's textual representation into the
/// string literal being created.
///
/// Do not call this method directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// interpreting string interpolations. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = """
/// If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, \
/// \(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars.
/// """
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
@inlinable
public mutating func appendInterpolation<T>(_ value: T)
where T: TextOutputStreamable, T: CustomStringConvertible
{
value.write(to: &self)
}
/// Interpolates the given value's textual representation into the
/// string literal being created.
///
/// Do not call this method directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// interpreting string interpolations. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = "If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, " +
/// "\(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars."
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
@inlinable
public mutating func appendInterpolation<T>(_ value: T)
where T: TextOutputStreamable
{
value.write(to: &self)
}
/// Interpolates the given value's textual representation into the
/// string literal being created.
///
/// Do not call this method directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// interpreting string interpolations. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = """
/// If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, \
/// \(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars.
/// """
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
@inlinable
public mutating func appendInterpolation<T>(_ value: T)
where T: CustomStringConvertible
{
value.description.write(to: &self)
}
/// Interpolates the given value's textual representation into the
/// string literal being created.
///
/// Do not call this method directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// interpreting string interpolations. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = """
/// If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, \
/// \(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars.
/// """
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
@inlinable
public mutating func appendInterpolation<T>(_ value: T) {
_print_unlocked(value, &self)
}
/// Creates a string from this instance, consuming the instance in the
/// process.
@inlinable
internal __consuming func make() -> String {
return _storage
}
}
extension DefaultStringInterpolation: CustomStringConvertible {
@inlinable
public var description: String {
return _storage
}
}
extension DefaultStringInterpolation: TextOutputStream {
@inlinable
public mutating func write(_ string: String) {
_storage.append(string)
}
public mutating func _writeASCII(_ buffer: UnsafeBufferPointer<UInt8>) {
_storage._guts.append(_StringGuts(buffer, isKnownASCII: true))
}
}
// While not strictly necessary, declaring these is faster than using the
// default implementation.
extension String {
/// Creates a new instance from an interpolated string literal.
///
/// Do not call this initializer directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// you create a string using string interpolation. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = """
/// If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, \
/// \(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars.
/// """
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
@inlinable
@_effects(readonly)
public init(stringInterpolation: DefaultStringInterpolation) {
self = stringInterpolation.make()
}
}
extension Substring {
/// Creates a new instance from an interpolated string literal.
///
/// Do not call this initializer directly. It is used by the compiler when
/// you create a string using string interpolation. Instead, use string
/// interpolation to create a new string by including values, literals,
/// variables, or expressions enclosed in parentheses, prefixed by a
/// backslash (`\(`...`)`).
///
/// let price = 2
/// let number = 3
/// let message = """
/// If one cookie costs \(price) dollars, \
/// \(number) cookies cost \(price * number) dollars.
/// """
/// print(message)
/// // Prints "If one cookie costs 2 dollars, 3 cookies cost 6 dollars."
@inlinable
@_effects(readonly)
public init(stringInterpolation: DefaultStringInterpolation) {
self.init(stringInterpolation.make())
}
}