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`ShortName` is lazily evaluated and does not allocate, instead providing `Display` and `Debug` implementations which write directly to a formatter using the original algorithm. When using `ShortName` in format strings (`panic`, `dbg`, `format`, etc.) you can directly use the `ShortName` type. If you require a `String`, simply call `ShortName(...).to_string()`. # Objective - Remove the requirement for allocation when using `get_short_name` ## Solution - Added new type `ShortName` which wraps a name and provides its own `Debug` and `Display` implementations, using the original `get_short_name` algorithm without the need for allocating. - Removed `get_short_name`, as `ShortName(...)` is more performant and ergonomic. - Added `ShortName::of::<T>` method to streamline the common use-case for name shortening. ## Testing - CI ## Migration Guide ### For `format!`, `dbg!`, `panic!`, etc. ```rust // Before panic!("{} is too short!", get_short_name(name)); // After panic!("{} is too short!", ShortName(name)); ``` ### Need a `String` Value ```rust // Before let short: String = get_short_name(name); // After let short: String = ShortName(name).to_string(); ``` ## Notes `ShortName` lazily evaluates, and directly writes to a formatter via `Debug` and `Display`, which removes the need to allocate a `String` when printing a shortened type name. Because the implementation has been moved into the `fmt` method, repeated printing of the `ShortName` type may be less performant than converting it into a `String`. However, no instances of this are present in Bevy, and the user can get the original behaviour by calling `.to_string()` at no extra cost. --------- Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com> |
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