Parse integers directly from [u8]
slices in safe code
Starting from a binary or ascii format you can parse an integer around three times as fast as with the more idiomatic detour over utf8. The crate comes with benchmarks so you can see for yourself.
The FromRadix10Checked
trait also provides a way to parse integers very fast and safe, as its
implementation only performs checked arithmetics for the one digit that may actually overflow.
Parsing from a slice
use atoi::atoi;
assert_eq!(Some(42), atoi::<u32>(b"42"));
Note that if you want to know how much of the input has been used, you can use the
FromRadix10
trait, for example:
use atoi::FromRadix10;
/// Return the parsed integer and remaining slice if successful.
fn atoi_with_rest<I: FromRadix10>(text: &[u8]) -> Option<(&[u8], I)> {
match I::from_radix_10(text) {
(_, 0) => None,
(n, used) => Some((&text[used..], n)),
}
}
This crate has more to offer! Check out the full documentation at docs.rs.