Enum bip39::MnemonicType
source · [−]pub enum MnemonicType {
Words12,
Words15,
Words18,
Words21,
Words24,
}
Expand description
Determines the number of words that will be present in a Mnemonic
phrase
Also directly affects the amount of entropy that will be used to create a Mnemonic
,
and therefore the cryptographic strength of the HD wallet keys/addresses that can be derived from
it using the Seed
.
For example, a 12 word mnemonic phrase is essentially a friendly representation of a 128-bit key, while a 24 word mnemonic phrase is essentially a 256-bit key.
If you know you want a specific phrase length, you can use the enum variant directly, for example
MnemonicType::Words12
.
You can also get a MnemonicType
that corresponds to one of the standard BIP39 key sizes by
passing arbitrary usize
values:
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_key_size(128).unwrap();
Variants
Words12
Words15
Words18
Words21
Words24
Implementations
sourceimpl MnemonicType
impl MnemonicType
sourcepub fn for_word_count(size: usize) -> Result<MnemonicType, Error>
pub fn for_word_count(size: usize) -> Result<MnemonicType, Error>
Get a MnemonicType
for a mnemonic phrase with a specific number of words
Specifying a word count not provided for by the BIP39 standard will return an Error
of kind ErrorKind::InvalidWordLength
.
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_word_count(12).unwrap();
sourcepub fn for_key_size(size: usize) -> Result<MnemonicType, Error>
pub fn for_key_size(size: usize) -> Result<MnemonicType, Error>
Get a MnemonicType
for a mnemonic phrase representing the given key size as bits
Specifying a key size not provided for by the BIP39 standard will return an Error
of kind ErrorKind::InvalidKeysize
.
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_key_size(128).unwrap();
sourcepub fn for_phrase(phrase: &str) -> Result<MnemonicType, Error>
pub fn for_phrase(phrase: &str) -> Result<MnemonicType, Error>
Get a MnemonicType
for an existing mnemonic phrase
This can be used when you need information about a mnemonic phrase based on the number of
words, for example you can get the entropy value using MnemonicType::entropy_bits
.
Specifying a phrase that does not match one of the standard BIP39 phrase lengths will return
an Error
of kind ErrorKind::InvalidWordLength
. The phrase will not be validated in any
other way.
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let test_mnemonic = "park remain person kitchen mule spell knee armed position rail grid ankle";
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_phrase(test_mnemonic).unwrap();
let entropy_bits = mnemonic_type.entropy_bits();
sourcepub fn total_bits(&self) -> usize
pub fn total_bits(&self) -> usize
Return the number of entropy+checksum bits
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let test_mnemonic = "park remain person kitchen mule spell knee armed position rail grid ankle";
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_phrase(test_mnemonic).unwrap();
let total_bits = mnemonic_type.total_bits();
sourcepub fn entropy_bits(&self) -> usize
pub fn entropy_bits(&self) -> usize
Return the number of entropy bits
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let test_mnemonic = "park remain person kitchen mule spell knee armed position rail grid ankle";
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_phrase(test_mnemonic).unwrap();
let entropy_bits = mnemonic_type.entropy_bits();
sourcepub fn checksum_bits(&self) -> u8
pub fn checksum_bits(&self) -> u8
Return the number of checksum bits
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let test_mnemonic = "park remain person kitchen mule spell knee armed position rail grid ankle";
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::for_phrase(test_mnemonic).unwrap();
let checksum_bits = mnemonic_type.checksum_bits();
sourcepub fn word_count(&self) -> usize
pub fn word_count(&self) -> usize
Return the number of words
Example
use bip39::{MnemonicType};
let mnemonic_type = MnemonicType::Words12;
let word_count = mnemonic_type.word_count();
Trait Implementations
sourceimpl Clone for MnemonicType
impl Clone for MnemonicType
sourcefn clone(&self) -> MnemonicType
fn clone(&self) -> MnemonicType
Returns a copy of the value. Read more
1.0.0 · sourcefn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
fn clone_from(&mut self, source: &Self)
Performs copy-assignment from source
. Read more
sourceimpl Debug for MnemonicType
impl Debug for MnemonicType
sourceimpl Default for MnemonicType
impl Default for MnemonicType
sourcefn default() -> MnemonicType
fn default() -> MnemonicType
Returns the “default value” for a type. Read more
sourceimpl Display for MnemonicType
impl Display for MnemonicType
impl Copy for MnemonicType
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for MnemonicType
impl Send for MnemonicType
impl Sync for MnemonicType
impl Unpin for MnemonicType
impl UnwindSafe for MnemonicType
Blanket Implementations
sourceimpl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T where
T: ?Sized,
const: unstable · sourcepub fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
pub fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
sourceimpl<T> ToOwned for T where
T: Clone,
impl<T> ToOwned for T where
T: Clone,
type Owned = T
type Owned = T
The resulting type after obtaining ownership.
sourcepub fn to_owned(&self) -> T
pub fn to_owned(&self) -> T
Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more
sourcepub fn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)
pub fn clone_into(&self, target: &mut T)
toowned_clone_into
)Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more