This library contains DebugIgnore
, a newtype wrapper that causes a field to be skipped while
printing out Debug
output.
use debug_ignore::DebugIgnore;
// Some structs have many fields with large `Debug` implementations.
#[derive(Debug)]
struct InnerStructWithLotsOfDebugInfo {
field: &'static str,
// ...
}
#[derive(Debug)]
pub struct PublicStruct {
inner: DebugIgnore<InnerStructWithLotsOfDebugInfo>,
}
impl PublicStruct {
pub fn new() -> Self {
Self {
// DebugIgnore<T> has a `From<T>` impl for the inner type; you can also construct
// one explicitly.
inner: InnerStructWithLotsOfDebugInfo { field: "field", /* ... */ }.into(),
}
}
}
let x = PublicStruct::new();
assert_eq!(format!("{:?}", x), "PublicStruct { inner: ... }");
// Fields within inner can still be accessed through the Deref impl.
assert_eq!(x.inner.field, "field");
Some structs have many fields with large Debug
implementations. It can be really annoying to
go through a ton of usually irrelevant Debug
output.
DebugIgnore
is a zero-cost, zero-compile-time way to achieve a Debug
impl that skips over a
field.
serde
: serde
support with #[serde(transparent)]
.
The MSRV is Rust 1.34 though this crate likely builds with older versions. This crate is too trivial to require anything more recent.
Optional features may require newer versions of Rust.
- Implement
Debug
by hand. derivative
has greater control over the behavior ofDebug
impls, at the cost of a compile-time proc-macro dependency.
Pull requests are welcome! Please follow the code of conduct.
This project is available under the terms of either the Apache 2.0 license or the MIT license.