4.4 KiB
stew - status e-something w-something
stew
is collection of utilities, std library extensions and budding libraries
that are frequently used at Status, but are too small to deserve their own
git repository.
We also use stew
as a staging ground for code that has yet to be
battle-tested.
Some of these libraries may eventually be proposed for inclusion in Nim or broken out into separate repositories.
Notable libraries
Libraries are documented either in-module or on a separate README in their respective folders
bitops2
- an updated version ofbitops.nim
, filling in gaps in original codebyteutils
- utilities that make working with the Nimbyte
type convenientendians2
- utilities for converting to and from little / big endian integersobjects
- get an object's base type at runtime, as a stringptrops
- pointer arithmetic utilitiesranges
- utility functions for working with parts and blobs of memoryresult
- friendly, exception-free value-or-error returns, similar toOption[T]
, from nim-resultshims
- backports of nimdevel
code to the stable version that Status is using
Layout
stew
modules are made to be fairly independent of each other, but generally
follow the following layout - if you've used C++'s boost
, you'll feel right at
home:
# Single-module libraries
stew/small.nim # small libraries that fits in one module
# Multi-module libraries
stew/libname.nim # Main import file
stew/libname/stuff.nim # Detail import file
# Nim standard library shims that contain forwards-compatibility code to manage
# support for multiple nim versions - code in here typically has been taken
# from nim `devel` branch and `name` will reexport the corresponding std lib
# module
stew/shims/macros.nim # module that reexports `macros.nim` adding code from newer nim versions
# Tests are in the tests folder (duh!)
# To execute, run either `all_tests.nim` or specific `test_xxx.nim` files:
nim c -r tests/all_tests
Compatibility
One of the goals of stew
is to provide backwards and forwards compatibility
for different Nim versions, such that code using stew
works well with multiple
versions of Nim. If stew
is not working with the Nim version you're using, we
welcome patches.
You can create multiple versions of your code using the following pattern:
when (NimMajor,NimMinor,NimPatch) >= (0,19,9):
discard
elif (NimMajor,NimMinor,NimPatch) >= (0,19,0):
discard
else
{.fatal: "unsupported nim version"}
Using stew in your project
We do not recommend using this library as a normal nimble
dependency - there
are no versioned releases and we will not maintain API/ABI stability. Instead,
make sure you pin your dependency to a specific git hash (for example using a
submodule) or copy the file to your project instead.
Typically, you will import either a top-level library or drill down into its submodules:
import stew/bitops2
import stew/ranges/bitranges
⚠️ No API/ABI stability - pick a commit and stick with it ⚠️
Contributing to stew
We welcome contributions to stew - in particular:
- if you feel that some part of
stew
should be part of Nim, we welcome your help in taking it through the Nim PR process. - if you're using
stew
with a particular Nim version, we welcome compatibility patches gated withwhen NimMajor .. and NimMinor ..
License
Licensed and distributed under either of
- MIT license: LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT
or
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHEv2 or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
at your option. These files may not be copied, modified, or distributed except according to those terms.