# writeable [](https://crates.io/crates/writeable)
This crate defines [`Writeable`], a trait representing an object that can be written to a
sink implementing `std::fmt::Write`. It is an alternative to `std::fmt::Display` with the
addition of a function indicating the number of bytes to be written.
`Writeable` improves upon `std::fmt::Display` in two ways:
1. More efficient, since the sink can pre-allocate bytes.
2. Smaller code, since the format machinery can be short-circuited.
This crate also exports [`TryWriteable`], a writeable that supports a custom error.
## Benchmarks
The benchmarks to generate the following data can be found in the `benches` directory.
| Create string from single-string message (139 chars) | 15.642 ns | 19.251 ns |
| Create string from complex message | 35.830 ns | 89.478 ns |
| Write complex message to buffer | 57.336 ns | 64.408 ns |
## Examples
```rust
use std::fmt;
use writeable::assert_writeable_eq;
use writeable::LengthHint;
use writeable::Writeable;
struct WelcomeMessage<'s> {
pub name: &'s str,
}
impl<'s> Writeable for WelcomeMessage<'s> {
fn write_to<W: fmt::Write + ?Sized>(&self, sink: &mut W) -> fmt::Result {
sink.write_str("Hello, ")?;
sink.write_str(self.name)?;
sink.write_char('!')?;
Ok(())
}
fn writeable_length_hint(&self) -> LengthHint {
// "Hello, " + '!' + length of name
LengthHint::exact(8 + self.name.len())
}
}
let message = WelcomeMessage { name: "Alice" };
assert_writeable_eq!(&message, "Hello, Alice!");
// Types implementing `Writeable` are recommended to also implement `fmt::Display`.
// This can be simply done by redirecting to the `Writeable` implementation:
writeable::impl_display_with_writeable!(WelcomeMessage<'_>);
assert_eq!(message.to_string(), "Hello, Alice!");
```
[`ICU4X`]: ../icu/index.html
## More Information
For more information on development, authorship, contributing etc. please visit [`ICU4X home page`](https://github.com/unicode-org/icu4x).