The Flex model has been our savior since a few years. You should do everything with the flex model (and cry when your sales guy come back from the client with a contract precising that you must support IE)
Note that there's now the grid model, which is supposed to be better. I don't personally like it
Most other chans are polluted (or rather flooded) with game and super nerd discussions... I prefer one which is more related to our job (no programmer can ignore the web)
It's not just the star, it's [role="banner"]: this means all nodes must be inspected. If you use just the star there's no question, but the star rarely comes alone
.role is very fast. *[node="banner"] is very very slow
(of course it doesn't matter for a static page with a few hundreds elements)
I will backtrack on ! implementing all traits. It obviously doesn't make sense when there are methods that do not mention Self. It only works for traits where every method takes self/&self/&mut self as an argument.
I just wanted to share the empowering last two days with you guys. Wednesday we had an awesome meetup about Rust in the evening, here in London, with the record amount of 186 (!) attendees. The talks were mostly very interesting, particularly the realisation, that if you look at the world wide Rust community and the new and fancy tools they are building -- you could feel the same empowering vibe as you could've a decade or so ago with the GNU projects.
And yesterday, we had our first Hack'n'Learn embedded Rust workshop held by the folks of the Ferrous Systems, with 30 attendees.
The CPUID instruction (identified by a CPUID opcode) is a processor supplementary instruction (its name derived from CPU IDentification) for the x86 architecture allowing software to discover details of the processor. It was introduced by Intel in 1993 when it introduced the Pentium and SL-enhanced 486 processors.A program can use the CPUID to determine processor type and whether features such as MMX/SSE are implemented.
== History ==
Prior to the general availability of the CPUID instruction, programmers would write esoteric machine code which exploited minor differences in CPU behavior in order...
Your code looks fine and such a bug in std.net would be strange. Browsers, though, have a limited number of network threads. Are you sure the limit you observed wasn't the browser's one ? A browser doesn't seem to be the best solution to benchmark server parallelism. — Denys Séguret1 min ago
There's no real MRE if the code to test isn't existing
on an other note as the are probably one of the most experimented here @DenysSéguret what do you think in short of microservice ? I try to understand what it is, get quite dissapointed about people who just discover to split thing :p but anyway I agree with the general philosophie but I wonder if this doesn't add a lot of overhead (too much ?) and I wonder if this doesn't slow down a little the dev in the early stage.
Splitting a applications into micro-services, focusing on the exchange and protocols, all this make a project more manageable and often easier to extend and refactor. But there's no magic. Of course it's heavier, often slower, and when badly managed can be a futile exercise in administration. Some technologies often linked to micro-services are very useful though even if you don't go til the "micro" level.
I think the best is a balance between the need to split up a big api and the need to not split too much, this is what I do most of the time when dev my personal architecture but I do/think for a friend he ask to take a look at microservice to make my design
well actually in practice there are other advantages: you could use whatever technology/language you like in each of the services -- they just have to agree on the protocol/interface they use for communication and that's that
also on modern scalable architecture this internal communication overhead is almost negligable
@PeterVaro this advantage make me really happy because I would like we use some rust but I don't want crash the society because we try rust so have one service build in rust like authentification could be a perfect R&D
@PeterVaro hu... depends. People often forget and don't realize the gigantic amount of work they dedicate to the communication bus just to make systems work
specially the sync between the same service, I see you can scale it "easily" I don't agree at all about easily, imagine the same request is made in the same time but the system give to two duplicate service, how do you handle the sync.
Be careful when the technologies come to free you but in reality add more constraints, like about everything generating code or introducing a tool chain
@Stargateur You're quite fuzzy here.
Are you talking of having two workers dedicated to a work queue ?
well, the problem of sync would be the same with monolitic, if you just duplicate the application you need to be sure the operation are sync. But as people claim microservice as easily scalable I expect they have a special way but... no. So far I didn't found any magic way.
You must realize that there are dozens of types of problems in sync. Like id generation, work stealing, etc. But you have often no choice if you want to scale
@PeterVaro thank you that will be use to convince my friend :p
@DenysSéguret yes ofc, so my question how ? :p there are tons of potentiel problem by just saying "duplicate service see this is scalable !".
In final I will just end up doing thing like I always do. Think and find an appropriate solution, instead of just following a design pattern. I getting really disapionted, every time I try to be "mainstream" and look for pattern I never understand how people do to follow them.
Yes there are problems... but microservice doesn't imply scaling, sync or duplication. Those are different problems. You can have microservices with just one instance of a worker
But of course that's not a revolution, more like the set of technologies which people use when they speak of microservices are more modern and better...
@DenysSéguret well, no, I found your answer clever too, I didn't even look to fix it as you did, I directly focus all generic :p. But don't you think the duplicate is correct ? well maybe not, but the answer in the duplicate show how to use into_iter in a generic.
I'm trying to store a io::Error in an enums assosiated value but the compiler yells because io::Error doesn't implement Clone. So why is this exactly what the documentation for From does? doc.rust-lang.org/std/convert/trait.From.html If you run this, it compiles and runs aswell. I'm confused
@PeterHall Default is a classical example of a trait that should not be implemented by !. So mh. As already said, ! can implement traits if they only contain methods that take a Self value as argument (potentially via reference). Because then we know the method will never be called. But once the trait has associated types or consts or methods not getting Self as argument, we cannot implement the trait for !.