commit | 7bea831ca583491e34d7836e23424e3df9fb0d90 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Matthew Maurer <mmaurer@google.com> | Fri Jul 31 01:37:51 2020 +0000 |
committer | Automerger Merge Worker <android-build-automerger-merge-worker@system.gserviceaccount.com> | Fri Jul 31 01:37:51 2020 +0000 |
tree | bac5734ad9700b50edc1ed2a616b5f1c93b02038 | |
parent | b013a554a5079bb1d9c93e0fc8887a57f12649bd [diff] | |
parent | 8bcb1ab79decf46f8602b1f50ffaaa25adda1e94 [diff] |
Add Android.bp and TEST_MAPPING am: 8bcb1ab79d Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/rust/crates/heck/+/1329967 Change-Id: Ie9faf80114743be1699952530fc1d54dd801181e
This library exists to provide case conversion between common cases like CamelCase and snake_case. It is intended to be unicode aware, internally consistent, and reasonably well performing.
Word boundaries are defined as the "unicode words" defined in the unicode_segmentation
library, as well as within those words in this manner:
That is, "HelloWorld" is segmented Hello|World
whereas "XMLHttpRequest" is segmented XML|Http|Request
.
Characters not within words (such as spaces, punctuations, and underscores) are not included in the output string except as they are a part of the case being converted to. Multiple adjacent word boundaries (such as a series of underscores) are folded into one. ("hello__world" in snake case is therefore "hello_world", not the exact same string). Leading or trailing word boundary indicators are dropped, except insofar as CamelCase capitalizes the first word.
PRs of additional well-established cases welcome.
This library is a little bit opinionated (dropping punctuation, for example). If that doesn't fit your use case, I hope there is another crate that does. I would prefer not to receive PRs to make this behavior more configurable.
Bug reports & fixes always welcome. :-)
heck is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0).
See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.