use std::str::Chars; /// Peekable iterator over a char sequence. /// /// Next characters can be peeked via `nth_char` method, /// and position can be shifted forward via `bump` method. pub(crate) struct Cursor<'a> { initial_len: usize, chars: Chars<'a>, prev: char, } pub(crate) const EOF_CHAR: char = '\0'; impl<'a> Cursor<'a> { pub(crate) fn new(input: &'a str) -> Cursor<'a> { Cursor { initial_len: input.len(), chars: input.chars(), #[cfg(debug_assertions)] prev: EOF_CHAR, } } /// For debug assertions only /// Returns the last eaten symbol (or '\0' in release builds). pub(crate) fn prev(&self) -> char { #[cfg(debug_assertions)] { self.prev } #[cfg(not(debug_assertions))] { '\0' } } /// Returns nth character relative to the current cursor position. /// If requested position doesn't exist, `EOF_CHAR` is returned. /// However, getting `EOF_CHAR` doesn't always mean actual end of file, /// it should be checked with `is_eof` method. fn nth_char(&self, n: usize) -> char { self.chars().nth(n).unwrap_or(EOF_CHAR) } /// Peeks the next symbol from the input stream without consuming it. pub(crate) fn first(&self) -> char { self.nth_char(0) } /// Checks if there is nothing more to consume. pub(crate) fn is_eof(&self) -> bool { self.chars.as_str().is_empty() } /// Returns amount of already consumed symbols. pub(crate) fn len_consumed(&self) -> usize { self.initial_len - self.chars.as_str().len() } /// Returns a `Chars` iterator over the remaining characters. pub(crate) fn chars(&self) -> Chars<'a> { self.chars.clone() } /// Moves to the next character. pub(crate) fn bump(&mut self) -> Option { let c = self.chars.next()?; #[cfg(debug_assertions)] { self.prev = c; } Some(c) } }