Finally got around to updating the spec based on feedback (#741)
* Finally got around to updating the spec based on feedback * Fixed failing spec test
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docs/spec.md
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docs/spec.md
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# Serialization specification
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# Serialization Specification
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*NOTE*: Serialization is done by `bincode_derive` by default. If you enable the `serde` flag, serialization with `serde-derive` is supported as well. `serde-derive` has the same guarantees as `bincode_derive` for now.
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_NOTE_: This specification is primarily defined in the context of Rust, but aims to be implementable across different programming languages.
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Related issue: <https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/1756#issuecomment-689682123>
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## Definitions
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## Endian
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- **Variant**: A specific constructor or case of an enum type.
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- **Variant Payload**: The associated data of a specific enum variant.
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- **Discriminant**: A unique identifier for an enum variant, typically represented as an integer.
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- **Basic Types**: Primitive types that have a direct, well-defined binary representation.
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By default `bincode` will serialize values in little endian encoding. This can be overwritten in the `Config`.
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## Endianness
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## Basic types
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By default, this serialization format uses little-endian byte order for basic numeric types. This means multi-byte values are encoded with their least significant byte first.
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Boolean types are encoded with 1 byte for each boolean type, with `0` being `false`, `1` being true. Whilst deserializing every other value will throw an error.
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Endianness can be configured with the following methods, allowing for big-endian serialization when required:
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All basic numeric types will be encoded based on the configured [IntEncoding](#intencoding).
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- [`with_big_endian`](https://docs.rs/bincode/2.0.0-rc/bincode/config/struct.Configuration.html#method.with_big_endian)
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- [`with_little_endian`](https://docs.rs/bincode/2.0.0-rc/bincode/config/struct.Configuration.html#method.with_little_endian)
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All floating point types will take up exactly 4 (for `f32`) or 8 (for `f64`) bytes.
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### Byte Order Considerations
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- Multi-byte values (integers, floats) are affected by endianness
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- Single-byte values (u8, i8) are not affected
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- Struct and collection serialization order is not changed by endianness
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## Basic Types
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### Boolean Encoding
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- Encoded as a single byte
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- `false` is represented by `0`
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- `true` is represented by `1`
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- During deserialization, values other than 0 and 1 will result in an error [`DecodeError::InvalidBooleanValue`](https://docs.rs/bincode/2.0.0-rc/bincode/error/enum.DecodeError.html#variant.InvalidBooleanValue)
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### Numeric Types
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- Encoded based on the configured [IntEncoding](#intencoding)
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- Signed integers use 2's complement representation
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- Floating point types use IEEE 754-2008 standard
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- `f32`: 4 bytes (binary32)
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- `f64`: 8 bytes (binary64)
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#### Floating Point Special Values
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- Subnormal numbers are preserved
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- Also known as denormalized numbers
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- Maintain their exact bit representation
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- `NaN` values are preserved
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- Both quiet and signaling `NaN` are kept as-is
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- Bit pattern of `NaN` is maintained exactly
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- No normalization or transformation of special values occurs
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- Serialization and deserialization do not alter the bit-level representation
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- Consistent with IEEE 754-2008 standard for floating-point arithmetic
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### Character Encoding
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- `char` is encoded as a 32-bit unsigned integer representing its Unicode Scalar Value
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- Valid Unicode Scalar Value range:
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- 0x0000 to 0xD7FF (Basic Multilingual Plane)
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- 0xE000 to 0x10FFFF (Supplementary Planes)
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- Surrogate code points (0xD800 to 0xDFFF) are not valid
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- Invalid Unicode characters can be acquired via unsafe code, this is handled as:
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- during serialization: data is written as-is
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- during deserialization: an error is raised [`DecodeError::InvalidCharEncoding`](https://docs.rs/bincode/2.0.0-rc/bincode/error/enum.DecodeError.html#variant.InvalidCharEncoding)
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- No additional metadata or encoding scheme beyond the raw code point value
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All tuples have no additional bytes, and are encoded in their specified order, e.g.
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```rust
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let tuple = (u32::min_value(), i32::max_value()); // 8 bytes
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let encoded = bincode::encode_to_vec(tuple, bincode::config::legacy()).unwrap();
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```
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## IntEncoding
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Bincode currently supports 2 different types of `IntEncoding`. With the default config, `VarintEncoding` is selected.
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### VarintEncoding
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Encoding an unsigned integer v (of any type excepting u8/i8) works as follows:
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1. If `u < 251`, encode it as a single byte with that value.
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```
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### Options
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`Option<T>` is always serialized using a single byte for the discriminant, even in `Fixint` encoding (which normally uses a `u32` for discriminant).
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```rust
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# Collections
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Collections are encoded with their length value first, following by each entry of the collection. The length value is based on your `IntEncoding`.
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## General Collection Serialization
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**note**: fixed array length may not have their `len` encoded. See [Arrays](#arrays)
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Collections are encoded with their length value first, followed by each entry of the collection. The length value is based on the configured `IntEncoding`.
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### Serialization Considerations
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- Length is always serialized first
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- Entries are serialized in the order they are returned from the iterator implementation.
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- Iteration order depends on the collection type
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- Ordered collections (e.g., `Vec`): Iteration from lowest to highest index
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- Unordered collections (e.g., `HashMap`): Implementation-defined iteration order
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- Duplicate keys are not checked in bincode, but may be resulting in an error when decoding a container from a list of pairs.
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### Handling of Specific Collection Types
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#### Linear Collections (`Vec`, Arrays, etc.)
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- Serialized by iterating from lowest to highest index
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- Length prefixed
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- Each item serialized sequentially
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```rust
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let list = vec![
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0u8,
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1u8,
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2u8
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];
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let list = vec![0u8, 1u8, 2u8];
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let encoded = bincode::encode_to_vec(list, bincode::config::legacy()).unwrap();
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assert_eq!(encoded.as_slice(), &[
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3, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, // length of 3u64
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]);
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```
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This also applies to e.g. `HashMap`, where each entry is a [tuple](#basic-types) of the key and value.
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#### Key-Value Collections (`HashMap`, etc.)
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- Serialized as a sequence of key-value pairs
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- Iteration order is implementation-defined
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- Each entry is a tuple of (key, value)
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### Special Collection Considerations
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- Bincode will serialize the entries based on the iterator order.
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- Deserialization is deterministic but the collection implementation might not guarantee the same order as serialization.
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**Note**: Fixed-length arrays do not have their length encoded. See [Arrays](#arrays) for details.
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# String and &str
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Both `String` and `&str` are treated as a `Vec<u8>`. See [Collections](#collections) for more information.
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## Encoding Principles
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- Strings are encoded as UTF-8 byte sequences
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- No null terminator is added
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- No Byte Order Mark (BOM) is written
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- Unicode non-characters are preserved
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### Encoding Details
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- Length is encoded first using the configured `IntEncoding`
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- Raw UTF-8 bytes follow the length
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- Supports the full range of valid UTF-8 sequences
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- `U+0000` and other code points can appear freely within the string
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### Unicode Handling
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- During serialization, the string is encoded as a sequence of the given bytes.
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- Rust strings are UTF-8 encoded by default, but this is not enforced by bincode
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- No normalization or transformation of text
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- If an invalid UTF-8 sequence is encountered during decoding, an [`DecodeError::Utf8`](https://docs.rs/bincode/2.0.0-rc/bincode/error/enum.DecodeError.html#variant.Utf8) error is raised
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```rust
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let str = "Hello"; // Could also be `String::new(...)`
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let str = "Hello 🌍"; // Mixed ASCII and Unicode
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let encoded = bincode::encode_to_vec(str, bincode::config::legacy()).unwrap();
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assert_eq!(encoded.as_slice(), &[
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5, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, // length of the string, 5 bytes
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b'H', b'e', b'l', b'l', b'o'
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10, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, // length of the string, 10 bytes
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b'H', b'e', b'l', b'l', b'o', b' ', 0xF0, 0x9F, 0x8C, 0x8D // UTF-8 encoded string
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]);
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```
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### Comparison with Other Types
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- Treated similarly to `Vec<u8>` in serialization
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- See [Collections](#collections) for more information about length and entry encoding
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# Arrays
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Array length is never encoded.
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Note that `&[T]` is encoded as a [Collection](#collections).
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```rust
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let arr: [u8; 5] = [10, 20, 30, 40, 50];
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let encoded = bincode::encode_to_vec(arr, bincode::config::legacy()).unwrap();
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```
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## TupleEncoding
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Tuple fields are serialized in first-to-last declaration order, with no additional metadata.
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- No length prefix is added
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- Fields are encoded sequentially
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- No padding or alignment adjustments are made
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- Order of serialization is deterministic and matches the tuple's declaration order
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## StructEncoding
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Struct fields are serialized in first-to-last declaration order, with no metadata representing field names.
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- No length prefix is added
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- Fields are encoded sequentially
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- No padding or alignment adjustments are made
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- Order of serialization is deterministic and matches the struct's field declaration order
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- Both named and unnamed fields are serialized identically
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## EnumEncoding
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Enum variants are encoded with a discriminant followed by optional variant payload.
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### Discriminant Allocation
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- Discriminants are automatically assigned by the derive macro in declaration order
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- First variant starts at 0
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- Subsequent variants increment by 1
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- Explicit discriminant indices are currently not supported
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- Discriminant is always represented as a `u32` during serialization. See [Discriminant Representation](#discriminant-representation) for more details.
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- Maintains the original enum variant semantics during encoding
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### Variant Payload Encoding
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- Tuple variants: Fields serialized in declaration order
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- Struct variants: Fields serialized in declaration order
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- Unit variants: No additional data encoded
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### Discriminant Representation
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- Always encoded as a `u32`
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- Encoding method depends on the configured `IntEncoding`
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- `VarintEncoding`: Variable-length encoding
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- `FixintEncoding`: Fixed 4-byte representation
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### Handling of Variant Payloads
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- Payload is serialized immediately after the discriminant
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- No additional metadata about field names or types
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- Payload structure matches the variant's definition
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