Compact, clone-on-write vector and string.
-
An
EcoVec
is a reference-counted thin vector. It takes up one word of space (= 1 usize). Within its allocation it stores a reference count, its length, and its capacity. -
An
EcoString
is a reference-counted string with inline storage. It takes up 16 bytes of space. It has 14 bytes of inline storage and starting from 15 bytes it becomes anEcoVec<u8>
.
// This is stored inline.
let small = ecow::EcoString::from("Welcome");
// This spills to the heap, but only once: `big` and `third` share the
// same underlying allocation. Vectors and spilled strings are only
// really cloned upon mutation.
let big = small + " to earth! 🌱";
let mut third = big.clone();
// This allocates again to mutate `third` without affecting `big`.
assert_eq!(third.pop(), Some('🌱'));
assert_eq!(third, "Welcome to earth! ");
Type | Details |
---|---|
Vec<T> / String |
Normal vectors are a great general purpose data structure. But they have a quite big footprint (3 machine words) and are expensive to clone. The EcoVec has a bit of overhead for mutation, but is small and cheap to clone. |
Arc<Vec<T>> / Arc<String> |
This requires two allocations instead of one and is less convenient to mutate. |
Arc<[T]> / Arc<str> |
While this only requires one allocation and has an acceptable footprint with 2 machine words, it isn't mutable. |
Small vector | Different trade-off. Great when T is small, but expensive to clone when spilled to the heap. |
Small string | The EcoString combines different small string qualities into a very practical package: It has inline storage, a smaller footprint than a normal String , is efficient to clone even when spilled, and at the same time mutable. |
This crate is dual-licensed under the MIT and Apache 2.0 licenses.