@LucDanton do you understand how mod foo { fn bar(){} } differ from `struct foo{} impl foo{ fn bar(){} }? obviously struct foo 'should' be Foo (and thus impl Foo). But like, appart from that, it all seems the be the same.
I guess I really need to understand what 'impl' really means.
@LucDanton yeah, so really the only things you put in an impl block should be functions that take a '&self' so that you can do foo.bar() opposed to bar(foo)
I guess it's a bit awkward (because of me) when you have `mod foo{ struct Foo{} fn do_staticy_thing(){} impl Foo { fn do_instance_thing(&self:Foo){} fn do_another_static_thing(){} }
Yeah I don’t know what the community consensus is on what should be a 'static` impl what should be a module-level function. I’ve heard that sometimes inferring/giving a hint for the static functions is sometimes problematic, so that could be a factor I suppose.