blob: 44e036fadca2d639ea731f87c07d4eeb9bc1d56f [file] [log] [blame]
//! This example demonstrates using the [attribute macro](https://doc.rust-lang.org/reference/procedural-macros.html#attribute-macros)
//! [`order`] to relocate fields to specified indexes in a [`Table`] display.
//!
//! * By default, [`Table`] columns are shown in the same ordered they are
//! defined in the deriving struct/enum definition.
use tabled::{Table, Tabled};
#[derive(Tabled)]
struct Country {
name: &'static str,
capital_city: &'static str,
surface_area_km2: f32,
#[tabled(order = 1)]
national_currency: &'static str,
#[tabled(order = 2)]
national_currency_short: &'static str,
}
impl Country {
fn new(
name: &'static str,
national_currency: &'static str,
national_currency_short: &'static str,
capital_city: &'static str,
surface_area_km2: f32,
) -> Self {
Self {
name,
national_currency,
national_currency_short,
capital_city,
surface_area_km2,
}
}
}
fn main() {
let data = [
Country::new("Afghanistan", "Afghani", "AFN", "Kabul", 652867.0),
Country::new("Angola", "Kwanza", "AOA", "Luanda", 1246700.0),
Country::new("Canada", "Canadian Dollar", "CAD", "Ottawa", 9984670.0),
];
let table = Table::new(data);
println!("{table}");
}