Awesome
Fastring
Fastring is a string formatting library for Scala.
Fastring
is also designed to be a template engine,
and it is an excellent replacement of JSP, Scalate or FreeMarker.
It's simple to use
Fastring
uses string interpolation syntax.
For example, if you are writing a CGI page:
import com.dongxiguo.fastring.Fastring.Implicits._
def printHtml(link: java.net.URL) {
val fastHtml = fast"<html><body><a href='$link'>Click Me!</a></body></html>"
print(fastHtml)
}
It's extremely fast
I made a benchmark. I used 4 different ways to create a 545-characters string.
- Fastring (
fast"Concat with $something"
syntax); - String concatenation (
s"Concat with $something"
syntax); - Handwritten
StringBuilder
(stringBuilder ++= "Build from " ++= something
syntax); java.util.Formatter
(f"Format with $something"
syntax).
This is the result from my Intel i5-3450 computer:
<table> <tr> <th> Fastring </th> <td> <pre><code>import com.dongxiguo.fastring.Fastring.Implicits._ def fast(a: Int) = fast"head ${ (for (j <- 0 until 10 view) yield { fast"baz$j $a foo ${ (for (i <- 0 until 4 view) yield { fast"$a i=$i" }).mkFastring(",") } bar\n" }).mkFastring("<hr/>") } tail"fast(0).toString</code></pre>
</td> <td> Took 669 nanoseconds to generate a 545-characters string.<br/>(Simple and fast) </td> </tr> <tr> <th> String concatenation </th> <td> <pre><code>def s(a: Int) = s"head ${ (for (j <- 0 until 10 view) yield { s"baz$j $a foo ${ (for (i <- 0 until 4 view) yield { s"$a i=$i" }).mkString(",") } bar\n" }).mkString("<hr/>") } tail"s(0)</code></pre>
</td> <td> Took 1738 nanoseconds to generate a 545-characters string.<br/>(Simple but slow) </td> </tr> <tr> <th> Handwritten <code>StringBuilder</code> </th> <td> <pre><code>def sb(sb: StringBuilder, a: Int) { sb ++= "head " var first = true for (j <- 0 until 10 view) { if (first) { first = false } else { sb ++= ""<hr/>"" } sb ++= "baz" ++= j.toString ++= " " ++= a.toString ++= " foo "; { var first = true for (i <- 0 until 4 view) { if (first) { first = false } else { sb ++= "," } sb ++= a.toString sb ++= " i=" sb ++= i.toString } } sb ++= " bar\n" } sb ++= " tail" sb }val s = new StringBuilder sb(s, 0) s.toString</code></pre>
</td> <td> Took 537 nanoseconds to generate a 545-characters string.<br/>(Fast but too trivial) </td> </tr> <tr> <th> <code>java.util.Formatter</code> </th> <td> <pre><code>def f(a: Int) = f"head ${ (for (j <- 0 until 10 view) yield { f"baz$j $a foo ${ (for (i <- 0 until 4 view) yield { f"$a i=$i" }).mkString(",") } bar\n" }).mkString("<hr/>") } tail"f(0)</code></pre>
</td> <td> Took 7436 nanoseconds to generate a 545-characters string.<br/>(Simple but extremely slow) </td> </tr> </table>Fastring
is so fast because it is lazily evaluated.
It avoids coping content for nested String Interpolation.
Thus, Fastring
is very suitable to generate complex text content(e.g. HTML, JSON).
For example, in the previous benchmark for Fastring
, the most of time was spent on invoking toString
.
You can avoid these overhead if you do not need a whole string. For example:
// Faster than: print(fast"My lazy string from $something")
fast"My lazy string from $something".foreach(print)
You can invoke foreach
because Fastring
is just a Traversable[String]
.
Utilities
There is a mkFastring
method for Seq
:
// Enable mkFastring method
import com.dongxiguo.fastring.Fastring.Implicits._
// Got Fastring("Seq.mkFastring: Hello, world")
fast"Seq.mkFastring: ${Seq("Hello", "world").mkFastring(", ")}"
// Also works, but slower:
// Got Fastring("Seq.mkString: Hello, world")
fast"Seq.mkString: ${Seq("Hello", "world").mkString(", ")}"
And a leftPad
method for Byte
, Short
, Int
and Long
:
// Enable leftPad method
import com.dongxiguo.fastring.Fastring.Implicits._
// Got Fastring("Int.leftPad: 123")
fast"Int.leftPad: ${123.leftPad(5)}"
// Got Fastring("Int.leftPad: 00123")
fast"Int.leftPad: ${123.leftPad(5, '0')}"
Installation
Put these lines in your build.sbt
if you use Sbt:
libraryDependencies += "com.dongxiguo" %% "fastring" % "latest.release"
See http://mvnrepository.com/artifact/com.dongxiguo/fastring_2.12 if you use Maven or other build systems.
Note that Fastring
requires Scala 2.10
, 2.11
or 2.12
.