diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index db19de9..5a5e85f 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,19 +1,60 @@ +* **[Latest Docs.rs Here](https://docs.rs/bytemuck/)** + [![License:Zlib](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-Zlib-brightgreen.svg)](https://opensource.org/licenses/Zlib) ![Minimum Rust Version](https://img.shields.io/badge/Min%20Rust-1.34-green.svg) [![crates.io](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/bytemuck.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/bytemuck) -[![docs.rs](https://docs.rs/bytemuck/badge.svg)](https://docs.rs/bytemuck/) # bytemuck A crate for mucking around with piles of bytes. +This crate lets you safely perform "bit cast" operations between data types. +That's where you take a value and just reinterpret the bits as being some other +type of value, without changing the bits. + +* This is **not** like the [`as` keyword][keyword-as] +* This is **not** like the [`From` trait][from-trait] +* It is **most like** [`f32::to_bits`][f32-to_bits], just generalized to let you + convert between all sorts of data types. + +[keyword-as]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/keyword.as.html +[from-trait]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/core/convert/trait.From.html +[f32-to_bits]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/std/primitive.f32.html#method.to_bits + +### Here's the part you're more likely to care about: *you can do this with slices too!* + +When a slice is involved it's not a *direct* bitcast. Instead, the `cast_slice` +and `cast_slice_mut` functions will pull apart a slice's data and give you a new +slice that's the same span of memory just viewed as the new type. If the size of +the slice's element changes then the length of the slice you get back will be +changed accordingly. + +This lets you cast a slice of color values into a slice of `u8` and send it to +the GPU, or things like that. I'm sure there's other examples, but honestly this +crate is as popular as it is mostly because of Rust's 3D graphics community +wanting to cast slices of different types into byte slices for sending to the +GPU. Hi friends! Push those vertices, or whatever it is that you all do. + +## See Also + +While `bytemuck` is full of unsafe code, I've also started a "sibling crate" +called [bitfrob](https://docs.rs/bitfrob/latest/bitfrob/), which is where +operations that are 100% safe will be added. + ## Stability -The goal is to stay at 1.y.z until _at least_ the next edition of Rust. +* The crate is 1.0 and I consider this it to be "basically done". New features + are usually being accepted when other people want to put in the work, but + myself I wanna move on to using `bytemuck` in bigger projects. +* The core of the `bytemuck` crate will continue to work with `rustc-1.34` for + at least the rest of the `1.y.z` versions. +* Opt-in features of the crate *are not* held to the same standard, and may work + only on the latest Stable or latest Nightly. -I consider any increase of the Minimum Rust Version to be a semver breaking change, -so `rustc-1.34` will continue to be supported for at least the rest of the -`bytemuck-1.y.z` series of the crate. +**Future Plans:** Once the [Safe Transmute Project][pg-st] completes and +stabilizes ("eventually") this crate will be updated to use that as the +underlying mechanism for transmutation bounds, and a 2.0 version of `bytemuck` +will be released. The hope is for the 1.0 to 2.0 transition to be as seamless as +possible, but the future is always uncertain. -(The secret goal is to get all of this functionality into the standard library -some day so that we don't even need to import a crate to do all this fun stuff.) +[pg-st]: https://rust-lang.github.io/rfcs/2835-project-safe-transmute.html