Just to give another idea.
#[allow(non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
mod MyEnum {
pub const A: i32 = 123;
pub const B: i32 = 456;
}
Then you can simply use it by accessing MyEnum::A
and MyEnum::B
or use MyEnum::*
.
The advantage of doing this over associated constants is that you can even nest more enums.
#[allow(non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
mod MyEnum {
pub const A: i32 = 123;
pub const B: i32 = 456;
#[allow(non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
mod SubEnum {
pub const C: i32 = 789;
}
}
For my project I wrote a macro that automatically generates indexes and sets initial values.
#[macro_export]
macro_rules! cnum {
(@step $_idx:expr,) => {};
(@step $idx:expr, $head:ident, $($tail:ident,)*) => {
pub const $head: usize = $idx;
cnum!(@step $idx + 1usize, $($tail,)*);
};
($name:ident; $($n:ident),* $(,)* $({ $($i:item)* })?) => {
cnum!($name; 0usize; $($n),* $({ $($i)* })?);
};
($name:ident; $start:expr; $($n:ident),* $(,)* $({ $($i:item)* })?) => {
#[macro_use]
#[allow(dead_code, non_snake_case, non_upper_case_globals)]
pub mod $name {
use crate::cnum;
$($($i)*)?
cnum!(@step $start, $($n,)*);
}
};
}
Then you can use it like this,
cnum! { Tokens;
EOF,
WhiteSpace,
Identifier,
{
cnum! { Literal; 100;
Numeric,
String,
True,
False,
Nil,
}
cnum! { Keyword; 200;
For,
If,
Return,
}
}
}