"... the onliest way ..." -> is this a common mistake amongst native speakers? I'm just curious because in German, this is a very common mistake to say "das einzigste" which is the superlative of "einzige" (roughly: "the only one").
@LukasKalbertodt If an English person said that, I would assume they were doing it intentionally, maybe trying to be cute, rather than making a mistake.
@LukasKalbertodt Were I to use it/see it used I'd be as a superlative form of "only", e.g. "the only way do to this is to kill yourself, but the onliest way to do it is to take your family with you".
Is there a chunks() equivalent for iterators yielding an iterator of iterators of length <= specified?
let mut line = String::new();
while try!(reader.read_line(&mut line)) != 0 {
line = line.replace('\r', "").replace('\n', "").replace('\t', &TAB_SPACING);
// use line, w/e
}
let _ = line;
Here's the chunk
Now it always allocates >twice, then deallocates previous chunks
4 allocations, 3 deallocations
@Shepmaster With in-place replace this would only be potential resize-allocations, which aren't all that often in my usecase
Is there a trivial way to split a string keeping the separators?
Instead of this:
let texte = "Ten. Million. Questions. Let's celebrate all we've done together.";
let v: Vec<&str> = texte.split(|c: char| !(c.is_alphanumeric() || c == '\'')).filter(|s| !s.is_empty()).collect();
which results wi...
@Shepmaster Uhh! Another language question (so sorry in case it's annoying). You said "I forget", but you meant that you "forgot", right? So why not using the past "forgot" here?
@Shepmaster Interesting. But to me, "I forget X" sounds like "I'm forgetting X in this moment". Which is strange...
It's probably just because I'm coming from another language, but "I forgot" sounds good to me. If I wanted to say that I forgot in the past but reremembered, I would be more explicit, like "I once forgot X, but then re-remembered it".
But there is probably no point in arguing against the rules of natural language :D
So many people approach "writing fast programs" incorrectly :/ it's sad. The amount of time wasted to think about irrelevant aspects of the program is astonishing.
It's best to just accept that no one understands the machine :P
Defining a custom enumeration is the most efficient way to do this. This will allow you to allocate on the stack exactly the amount of space you need, i.e. the size of the largest option, plus 1 extra byte to track which option is stored. It also allows direct access without a level of indirectio...
@Renato Good idea ;-) however, writing fast programs is not as easy as it sounds. And while it's often the case that most of your code becomes magically fast when written in idiomatic Rust, this doesn't apply to everything. So just by using Rust, you might now gain the speedup you wished for ;-)
So the enum version works without dynamic dispatch which is good in theory, but it has some... dispatching via match. This suggestion by Shepmaster probably performs better.
@Renato So... the deamon is keeping the JVM alive. Invoking the CLI app sends the java code to your deamon which then uses a in memory java compiler to compile and execute the code on the JVM?
@Renato Well, you wouldn't repeat a lot. You would only repeat the function call twice :P
And in the context of your whole application: I don't think the sending Java code actually makes a big difference. Again, allocating heap memory with jemalloc (Rust's default allocator) for a file descriptor (which is tiny) won't cost that much time...
@Renato Which is equally true for Rust. Tweaking heap allocations doesn't make a lot of sense when you are accessing a database afterwards. But if you are not limited by IO and stuff like heap allocations is really a notable contributor to the time spend running your program, then you can optimize that ^_^