It should come as no surprise that life lately has been dominated by the upcoming Rust 1.0 release. But now that the beta release is out the door, I’ve started to give some thought to what we ought to do next. Obviously, there is no shortage of good ideas out there for how to grow the language. Just as obviously, we need to be careful about what we implement and when we implement it. This post rep
The Rust Programming Language by Steve Klabnik and Carol Nichols, with contributions from the Rust Community This version of the text assumes you’re using Rust 1.67.1 (released 2023-02-09) or later. See the “Installation” section of Chapter 1 to install or update Rust. The HTML format is available online at https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/book/ and offline with installations of Rust made with rus
Rust 1.0 is on its way! We have nailed down a concrete list of features and are hard at work on implementing them. We plan to ship the 1.0 beta around the end of the year. If all goes well, this will go on to become the 1.0 release after the beta period. After 1.0 is released, future 1.x releases will be backwards compatible, meaning that existing code will continue to compile unmodified (modulo c
Travis CI could be looking for you. Now, you can write an article for Travis CI and get paid. You can earn: $500 per article$250 bonus if the article gets 1,000 organic views... Introduction Trunk-based development is one of the most widely used branching methodologies. It helps teams collaborate and build and deliver software.This article will examine... Docker Build Cloud has been a popular topi
I've recently become a fan of the Rust Language. I think memory safety without garbage collection is an important innovation in the field and I'm excited by the prospect of using a safer alternative to C++ for fast low level code in my job. Unfortunately the language is currently in heavy development, with major features changing every week or so. This is exciting but makes it unsuitable for produ
[Rust](http://www.rust-lang.org/) is a programming language with a focus on type safety, memory safety, concurrency and performance.About the author Questions and Issues Edit and Contribute Introduction 1. Hello World 2. Formatted print 3. Literals 4. Variables 5. Types and casting 6. if/else 7. loop and while 8. for and range 9. Functions 10. Expressions 11. Tuples 12. Pattern matching 13. Struct
About the author Questions and Issues Edit and Contribute Introduction 1. Hello World 2. Formatted print 3. Literals 4. Variables 5. Types and casting 6. if/else 7. loop and while 8. for and range 9. Functions 10. Expressions 11. Tuples 12. Pattern matching 13. Structs 14. Generics 15. Box, stack and heap 16. Ownership and moves 17. RAII and borrow 18. Methods 19. Lifetimes 20. Global constants 21
Alex Vranas wrote on April 17, 2014 at 8:03 pm: Even Mozilla doesn’t understand Heartbleed… “Many kinds of browser security bugs, such as the recent Heartbleed vulnerability, are prevented automatically by the Rust compiler.” That’s pretty amazing seeing that Heartbleed is a SERVER vulnerability and has absolutely nothing to do with what kind of browser you are using! Unless Mozilla has bestowed u
Higher-order, Typed, Inferred, Strict ACM SIGPLAN ML Family Workshop Thursday September 4, 2014, Gothenburg, Sweden (immediately following ICFP and preceding OCaml Users and Developers Workshop) News Dec 5, 2015 The post-proceedings with the extended versions of the selected ML Family and OCaml 2014 workshop submissions are published as EPTCS 198 Sep 10, 2014 The video record of all presentations
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