Provides C99 integer types such as uint_fast16_t, uint_least16_t etc. for interfacing with
C libraries that use them in both standard and no_std environments. Inspired by Vojtech Kral's C99 crate.
The library defaults to use the std crate. You can therefore
simply add the dependency to your Cargo.toml file:
[dependencies]
stdint = "*"To use the library in no_std environment, disable the use of
default features:
[dependencies]
stdint = { version = "*", default-features = false }Note that the specific type aliases depend on your target architecture. On docs.rs,
the int_fast16_t type is currently shown as aliased to an std::ffi::c_long; this is an artifact
of the documentation generator:
pub type int_fast16_t = c_long;The actual guarantees are:
#[test]
fn int16() {
assert_eq!(size_of::<int16_t>(), 2);
assert!(size_of::<int_least16_t>() >= 2);
assert!(size_of::<int_fast16_t>() >= 2);
assert_eq!(size_of::<uint16_t>(), 2);
assert!(size_of::<uint_least16_t>() >= 2);
assert!(size_of::<uint_fast16_t>() >= 2);
}To execute the tests in no_std mode, run
$ cargo test --no-default-features| N | Exact size (N bits) | Smallest type with at least N bits | Fastest type with at least N bits |
|---|---|---|---|
8 |
int8_t, uint8_t |
int_least8_t, uint_least8_t |
int_fast8_t, uint_fast8_t |
16 |
int16_t, uint16_t |
int_least16_t, uint_least16_t |
int_fast16_t, uint_fast16_t |
32 |
int32_t, uint32_t |
int_least32_t, uint_least32_t |
int_fast32_t, uint_fast32_t |
64 |
int64_t, uint64_t |
int_least64_t, uint_least64_t |
int_fast64_t, uint_fast64_t |
| Type | Purpose |
|---|---|
intptr_t, uintptr_t |
Type capable of holding *void |
intmax_t, uintmax_t |
Largest integer type available |
According MIN and MAX constants defined in stdint.h are exposed through
the consts module such as INT_FAST16_MIN and INT_FAST16_MAX. Due to Rust's type system,
these value are identical to int_fast16_t::MIN and int_fast16_t::MAX.