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12:22
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Q: Ducktape rust to c compiler via assembly?

zaabsonFor an university course I write some c/c++ programs which are then sent to an online judge and tested on inputs. I hate c++. I am researching ways to compile rust to c. Afaik you can straight up embed assembly snippets in c programs. With a little bit of poking around I should be able to figure ...

Mat
Mat
If this is a university assignment, the purpose it for you to learn C or C++. What you're asking makes no sense in that context.
If the project is complex enough, this is almost certainly not going to work. And if it isn't, surely just writing a bit of C has to be preferable to this.
C and C++ are two different languages. From the tag and code, it looks like you mean C?
Try using a c backend with LLVM.
@Mat ^ the purpose is not to learn c or c++ (course is on graphs). Don't know why you've assumed it. c++ is an arbitrary circumstance of this specific online judge which is not being actively developed now.
Online judge accepts both c and c++, either works. Though I also don't see how a solution anywhere similar to described would actively make use of it being c++ and not c as the target language.
12:22
While interesting, I foresee everyone using C++ and you using Rust causing a lot of problems as the course progresses. Eg specific libraries, group work or sharing, answers to the homework, lectures, tests. The languages are very similar with regard to the course content, you might as well go with what your instructor's expect.
@Neil its not a kindergarten assignment... The task is to implement a well defined algorithm, the task is judged based on the results of tests. And as the source code might be read by the lecturer I plan to provide original rust source as a comment.
And I wonder if I can compile rust to a plain vanilla no libraries subset of C. Expecting problems, but maybe not actually? That's my question above
Why not just learn how to write a robust input routine in C or C++ to begin with? There are many good examples on this site of how to handle all forms of input in the proper way and the error handling needed to gracefully respond to any invalid input provided. That seems a much better use of your time instead of trying to cobble inline assembly from rust into a C source. Inline-assembly itself is full of pitfalls for the unwary. If you actually provided sample input you need to handle, we could actually point you in the right direction.
@DavidC.Rankin Why has some input routine anything to do with the topic or with what I'm trying to achieve?
"For an university course I write some c/c++ programs which are then sent to an online judge and tested on inputs." ??
@DavidC.Rankin I haven't suggested in the slightest that parsing the input is what I struggle with? I can indeed complete the tasks using any turing machine but the tasks are long enough for me to care to not use c++ or c.
12:22
No worries, I have no dog in this fight. You can solve the problem any way you like. However, after working with C and inline-assembly for a number of years, it is an unforgiving route to take. If you have a rust executable that does what you want, why not just call it with popen() if you can submit your project containing more than 1 executable. Just brainstorming ideas that may work given the content of your question. Please provide a A Minimal Complete Reproducable Example to receive specific help.
yup sorry. popen won't be allowed in the online judge environment.
its not a kindergarten assignment... (course is on graphs). Compiling rust to a single C file may end up being easier than implementing complex graph algorithms is Rust =,)
@IncreasinglyIdiotic I am positive. The algorithms deal with integer vertices - really it's all arrays, no recursive structures. No weak references needed. And really - why would something easy to code in c++ would ever be harder in rust?
What makes you think that coding in C++ is easy? Actually it is not, C++ is one of the worst language for beginners. -- Have you checked Robert's suggestion? -- Are you allowed to use a self-written library and provide it compiled? Then you could compile your Rust code into a library, and code a simple driver in C that links this library. That bit of C is actually easy to learn.
Refusing to accept/adapt-to the requirements is known as a "CLM"... a Career Limiting Move...
12:22
Refusing to accept the requirements of the problem may be a CLM, but it's also a solution-limiting move. Whenever you add a requirement (e.g. "avoid c++") to suit your own taste, you risk blocking a set of good solutions. Putting your own taste over achieving a good solution is IMO unethical, even if your taste is better than average.
@arnt you made me realize we might not be on the same wavelengths here haha. Im actually not a noob xd and well into my programming career to know what I want and don't want - and I know i won't get you all on board with my opinions. I don't need a help with uni assignment but with a rust to c transpiler.
Speaking as somebody who's graded hundreds of C++ assignments for a university course, I would expect your instructor to be immediately frustrated with a Rust-based solution that subverts the grading framework. Don't be surprised if you get a zero for submitting an assignment that doesn't match anything in the grading rubric. Suck it up and write in C++, or at least talk to your instructor before starting down this route to see if they could allow a pure Rust solution as well, which will save you from all this backwards effort as well.
I feel like, if you can code in Rust, you'll manage using C/C++ just fine. While C/C++ certainly aren't the most expressive/beautiful languages, you can still learn things from them that apply to Rust aswell.

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