4 stable releases
| 1.0.20 | Jan 26, 2026 |
|---|---|
| 1.0.17 | Jan 11, 2026 |
#426 in Procedural macros
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Used in 9 crates
(8 directly)
43KB
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Macros for all your token pasting needs
Actively maintained fork of paste (originally by David Tolnay). This fork continues development with modern tooling, security scanning, and active maintenance.
The nightly-only concat_idents! macro in the Rust standard library is
notoriously underpowered in that its concatenated identifiers can only refer to
existing items, they can never be used to define something new.
This crate provides a flexible way to paste together identifiers in a macro, including using pasted identifiers to define new items.
[dependencies]
qlora-paste = "1.0"
This approach works with any Rust compiler 1.92+.
Pasting identifiers
Within the paste! macro, identifiers inside [<...>] are pasted together to
form a single identifier.
use qlora_paste::paste;
paste! {
// Defines a const called `QRST`.
const [<Q R S T>]: &str = "success!";
}
fn main() {
assert_eq!(
paste! { [<Q R S T>].len() },
8,
);
}
More elaborate example
The next example shows a macro that generates accessor methods for some struct fields. It demonstrates how you might find it useful to bundle a paste invocation inside of a macro_rules macro.
use qlora_paste::paste;
macro_rules! make_a_struct_and_getters {
($name:ident { $($field:ident),* }) => {
// Define a struct. This expands to:
//
// pub struct S {
// a: String,
// b: String,
// c: String,
// }
pub struct $name {
$(
$field: String,
)*
}
// Build an impl block with getters. This expands to:
//
// impl S {
// pub fn get_a(&self) -> &str { &self.a }
// pub fn get_b(&self) -> &str { &self.b }
// pub fn get_c(&self) -> &str { &self.c }
// }
paste! {
impl $name {
$(
pub fn [<get_ $field>](&self) -> &str {
&self.$field
}
)*
}
}
}
}
make_a_struct_and_getters!(S { a, b, c });
fn call_some_getters(s: &S) -> bool {
s.get_a() == s.get_b() && s.get_c().is_empty()
}
Case conversion
Use $var:lower or $var:upper in the segment list to convert an interpolated
segment to lower- or uppercase as part of the paste. For example, [<ld_ $reg:lower _expr>] would paste to ld_bc_expr if invoked with $reg=Bc.
Use $var:snake to convert CamelCase input to snake_case.
Use $var:camel to convert snake_case to CamelCase.
These compose, so for example $var:snake:upper would give you SCREAMING_CASE.
The precise Unicode conversions are as defined by str::to_lowercase and
str::to_uppercase.
Pasting documentation strings
Within the paste! macro, arguments to a #[doc ...] attribute are implicitly
concatenated together to form a coherent documentation string.
use qlora_paste::paste;
macro_rules! method_new {
($ret:ident) => {
paste! {
#[doc = "Create a new `" $ret "` object."]
pub fn new() -> $ret { todo!() }
}
};
}
pub struct Paste {}
method_new!(Paste); // expands to #[doc = "Create a new `Paste` object"]
Migrating from paste
If you're migrating from the original paste crate, see the MIGRATION.md guide for detailed instructions. The API is 100% compatible, so migration is typically just updating your Cargo.toml and import statements.
License
Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.