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Move Postcard link up to Bincode spot
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Bincode has been in prerelease limbo for nearly a year and the readme
does not mention anything related to Serde, so it is not serving as a
good first link to a Serde binary format.
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dtolnay committed Aug 1, 2022
1 parent 85e7265 commit 10e4839
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Showing 3 changed files with 13 additions and 16 deletions.
14 changes: 7 additions & 7 deletions serde/src/de/mod.rs
Expand Up @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
//! # The Deserializer trait
//!
//! [`Deserializer`] implementations are provided by third-party crates, for
//! example [`serde_json`], [`serde_yaml`] and [`bincode`].
//! example [`serde_json`], [`serde_yaml`] and [`postcard`].
//!
//! A partial list of well-maintained formats is given on the [Serde
//! website][data formats].
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -104,7 +104,7 @@
//! [`Deserialize`]: ../trait.Deserialize.html
//! [`Deserializer`]: ../trait.Deserializer.html
//! [`LinkedHashMap<K, V>`]: https://docs.rs/linked-hash-map/*/linked_hash_map/struct.LinkedHashMap.html
//! [`bincode`]: https://github.com/bincode-org/bincode
//! [`postcard`]: https://github.com/jamesmunns/postcard
//! [`linked-hash-map`]: https://crates.io/crates/linked-hash-map
//! [`serde_derive`]: https://crates.io/crates/serde_derive
//! [`serde_json`]: https://github.com/serde-rs/json
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -874,7 +874,7 @@ where
/// `Deserializer::deserialize_any`.
///
/// 2. The various `deserialize_*` methods. Non-self-describing formats like
/// Bincode need to be told what is in the input in order to deserialize it.
/// Postcard need to be told what is in the input in order to deserialize it.
/// The `deserialize_*` methods are hints to the deserializer for how to
/// interpret the next piece of input. Non-self-describing formats are not
/// able to deserialize something like `serde_json::Value` which relies on
Expand All @@ -884,7 +884,7 @@ where
/// `Deserializer::deserialize_any` unless you need to be told by the
/// Deserializer what type is in the input. Know that relying on
/// `Deserializer::deserialize_any` means your data type will be able to
/// deserialize from self-describing formats only, ruling out Bincode and many
/// deserialize from self-describing formats only, ruling out Postcard and many
/// others.
///
/// [Serde data model]: https://serde.rs/data-model.html
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -915,7 +915,7 @@ pub trait Deserializer<'de>: Sized {
/// `Deserializer::deserialize_any` unless you need to be told by the
/// Deserializer what type is in the input. Know that relying on
/// `Deserializer::deserialize_any` means your data type will be able to
/// deserialize from self-describing formats only, ruling out Bincode and
/// deserialize from self-describing formats only, ruling out Postcard and
/// many others.
fn deserialize_any<V>(self, visitor: V) -> Result<V::Value, Self::Error>
where
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1156,7 +1156,7 @@ pub trait Deserializer<'de>: Sized {
/// Some types have a human-readable form that may be somewhat expensive to
/// construct, as well as a binary form that is compact and efficient.
/// Generally text-based formats like JSON and YAML will prefer to use the
/// human-readable one and binary formats like Bincode will prefer the
/// human-readable one and binary formats like Postcard will prefer the
/// compact one.
///
/// ```edition2018
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1560,7 +1560,7 @@ pub trait Visitor<'de>: Sized {
/// `Deserializer`.
///
/// This enables zero-copy deserialization of bytes in some formats. For
/// example Bincode data containing bytes can be deserialized with zero
/// example Postcard data containing bytes can be deserialized with zero
/// copying into a `&'a [u8]` as long as the input data outlives `'a`.
///
/// The default implementation forwards to `visit_bytes`.
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7 changes: 2 additions & 5 deletions serde/src/lib.rs
Expand Up @@ -31,8 +31,7 @@
//! for Serde by the community.
//!
//! - [JSON], the ubiquitous JavaScript Object Notation used by many HTTP APIs.
//! - [Bincode], a compact binary format
//! used for IPC within the Servo rendering engine.
//! - [Postcard], a no\_std and embedded-systems friendly compact binary format.
//! - [CBOR], a Concise Binary Object Representation designed for small message
//! size without the need for version negotiation.
//! - [YAML], a self-proclaimed human-friendly configuration language that ain't
Expand All @@ -45,7 +44,6 @@
//! - [Avro], a binary format used within Apache Hadoop, with support for schema
//! definition.
//! - [JSON5], a superset of JSON including some productions from ES5.
//! - [Postcard], a no\_std and embedded-systems friendly compact binary format.
//! - [URL] query strings, in the x-www-form-urlencoded format.
//! - [Envy], a way to deserialize environment variables into Rust structs.
//! *(deserialization only)*
Expand All @@ -59,7 +57,7 @@
//! and from DynamoDB.
//!
//! [JSON]: https://github.com/serde-rs/json
//! [Bincode]: https://github.com/bincode-org/bincode
//! [Postcard]: https://github.com/jamesmunns/postcard
//! [CBOR]: https://github.com/enarx/ciborium
//! [YAML]: https://github.com/dtolnay/serde-yaml
//! [MessagePack]: https://github.com/3Hren/msgpack-rust
Expand All @@ -69,7 +67,6 @@
//! [BSON]: https://github.com/mongodb/bson-rust
//! [Avro]: https://github.com/flavray/avro-rs
//! [JSON5]: https://github.com/callum-oakley/json5-rs
//! [Postcard]: https://github.com/jamesmunns/postcard
//! [URL]: https://docs.rs/serde_qs
//! [Envy]: https://github.com/softprops/envy
//! [Envy Store]: https://github.com/softprops/envy-store
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8 changes: 4 additions & 4 deletions serde/src/ser/mod.rs
Expand Up @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@
//! # The Serializer trait
//!
//! [`Serializer`] implementations are provided by third-party crates, for
//! example [`serde_json`], [`serde_yaml`] and [`bincode`].
//! example [`serde_json`], [`serde_yaml`] and [`postcard`].
//!
//! A partial list of well-maintained formats is given on the [Serde
//! website][data formats].
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -99,7 +99,7 @@
//! [`LinkedHashMap<K, V>`]: https://docs.rs/linked-hash-map/*/linked_hash_map/struct.LinkedHashMap.html
//! [`Serialize`]: ../trait.Serialize.html
//! [`Serializer`]: ../trait.Serializer.html
//! [`bincode`]: https://github.com/bincode-org/bincode
//! [`postcard`]: https://github.com/jamesmunns/postcard
//! [`linked-hash-map`]: https://crates.io/crates/linked-hash-map
//! [`serde_derive`]: https://crates.io/crates/serde_derive
//! [`serde_json`]: https://github.com/serde-rs/json
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -314,7 +314,7 @@ pub trait Serialize {
/// - For example the `E::S` in `enum E { S { r: u8, g: u8, b: u8 } }`.
///
/// Many Serde serializers produce text or binary data as output, for example
/// JSON or Bincode. This is not a requirement of the `Serializer` trait, and
/// JSON or Postcard. This is not a requirement of the `Serializer` trait, and
/// there are serializers that do not produce text or binary output. One example
/// is the `serde_json::value::Serializer` (distinct from the main `serde_json`
/// serializer) that produces a `serde_json::Value` data structure in memory as
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1423,7 +1423,7 @@ pub trait Serializer: Sized {
/// Some types have a human-readable form that may be somewhat expensive to
/// construct, as well as a binary form that is compact and efficient.
/// Generally text-based formats like JSON and YAML will prefer to use the
/// human-readable one and binary formats like Bincode will prefer the
/// human-readable one and binary formats like Postcard will prefer the
/// compact one.
///
/// ```edition2018
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