Same idea as (but implementation not directly based on) the Python shlex module. However, this implementation does not support any of the Python module's customization because it makes parsing slower and is fairly useless. You only get the default settings of shlex.split, which mimic the POSIX shell: https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html
This implementation also deviates from the Python version in not treating \r specially, which I believe is more compliant.
This crate can be used on either normal Rust strings, or on byte strings with
the bytes
module. The algorithms used are oblivious to UTF-8 high bytes, so
internally they all work on bytes directly as a micro-optimization.
Disabling the std
feature (which is enabled by default) will allow the crate
to work in no_std
environments, where the alloc
crate, and a global
allocator, are available.
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