enum-display is a crate for implementing std::fmt::Display on enum variants with macros.
std(default): Enables standard library support for convenience methods liketo_string()no_std: Core functionality that works inno_stdenvironments without allocation
To use in no_std mode, disable default features:
[dependencies]
enum-display = { version = "0.2.1", default-features = false }The crate works without allocation by writing directly to the formatter:
#![no_std]
extern crate alloc;
use alloc::string::ToString;
use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
enum Status {
    Ready,
    #[display("Error: {code}")]
    Error { code: u32 },
}
fn main() {
    // Works in no_std!
    assert_eq!(Status::Ready.to_string(), "Ready");
}use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
enum Color {
  Red,
  Green,
  Blue,
}
assert_eq!(Color::Red.to_string(), "Red");
assert_eq!(Color::Green.to_string(), "Green");
assert_eq!(Color::Blue.to_string(), "Blue");Any case from convert_case is supported.
use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
#[enum_display(case = "Kebab")]
enum Message {
    HelloGreeting { name: String },
}
assert_eq!(Message::HelloGreeting { name: "Alice".to_string() }.to_string(), "hello-greeting");The #[display] attribute allows you to customize how individual enum variants are formatted. This attribute accepts a format string that follows Rust's standard formatting syntax.
use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
enum Status {
    // Unit variant with custom text
    #[display("System is ready")]
    Ready,
    
    // Using the variant name with {variant}
    #[display("{variant}: Operation completed")]
    Success,
}
assert_eq!(Status::Ready.to_string(), "System is ready");
assert_eq!(Status::Success.to_string(), "Success: Operation completed");The #[display] attribute provides different ways to access variant data:
| Variant Type | Access Pattern | Example | 
|---|---|---|
| Unit | {variant} only | 
#[display("{variant} occurred")] | 
| Named {...} | Field names | #[display("Error: {message} (code: {code})")] | 
| Tuple (...) | Positional indices | #[display("Processing {0} of {1}")] | 
use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
enum Response {
    #[display("Success: {message}")]
    Success { message: String },
    
    #[display("Error {code}: {description}")]
    Error { code: u32, description: String },
}
let success = Response::Success { 
    message: "Data saved".to_string() 
};
assert_eq!(success.to_string(), "Success: Data saved");use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
enum Progress {
    #[display("Loading... {0}%")]
    Loading(u8),
    
    #[display("Processing item {0} of {1}")]
    Processing(usize, usize),
}
assert_eq!(Progress::Loading(75).to_string(), "Loading... 75%");
assert_eq!(Progress::Processing(3, 10).to_string(), "Processing item 3 of 10");The #[display] attribute supports all of Rust's format string features:
use enum_display::EnumDisplay;
#[derive(EnumDisplay)]
enum Metrics {
    #[display("CPU: {usage:.1}%")]
    CpuUsage { usage: f64 },
    
    #[display("Memory: {used:>8} / {total:<8} bytes")]
    Memory { used: usize, total: usize },
    
    #[display("Temperature: {0:3}°C")]
    Temperature(i32),
}