Imagine you have an entire ecosystem of devices out there that communicate with as physical layer RS485
and the layer3 stuff is done with modbus
you think "Hey, we don't need to build all that shit, let's use that"
The sales guy thinks "Hey, we can resell all that shit, let's use that"
and then the CEO, who tries to do the hardware as well, goes "Fuck you guys, RS485 can be broken if the wires get set up incorrectly, we're using Sympol"
up until that point I had never heard of a single product using sympol as an actual thing
I thought it was 100% PoC from TI
turns out it is 100% PoC from TI
;-)
there is no Sympol HAL in the linux kernel
there is no Sympol code support anywhere
so I'd have to write the entire thing from the ground up, through the linux kernel and up into the management daemon
all this because somebody wanted to play with something new and exciting
@Shepmaster It's not clear to me how you can solve this problem. Can you explicitly say the lifetime of the arg is different from the one of the returned impl?
I understand the compiler is at fault here but is there a workaround ?
If someone knows 4-5 languages, that are very different from each other, and they are impressive in 2 of them, then they can be productive in Rust quite quickly
a lot of Rust problems arise from bad design decisions early on. So having a few people who know Rust, helping the newbies plan their work, makes a huge difference
One of our juniors ran into his first lifetime issue after more than 2 months
Partly because we mostly work with small Copy messages, and the architecture is all in place - he only had to plug in new features into existing structure
I agree that the old version was better, in fact. I've read it too fast and it's clearly better to avoid "systems programming" while "without GC" isn't without trap either
Is Rust more or less verbose than Java ? With experience in Java and some knowledge of Rust I tend to think that a clean and efficient Java program is longer than a Rust one and sure feels more verbose.
(but writing that as comment of a question wouldn't be constructive)
@DenysSéguret I think it's also a matter of perception. You can avoid lifetimes for a long time (example) and mutability can in many ways be dealt with by doing as the compiler tells you.
@DenysSéguret without reviewing the code deeply, I bet there's somewhere that could have used references to gain some performance, but it wasn't needed.
well, there I go conflating lifetimes and references again
@Shepmaster Unsure. I'll probably have a deep look at it the day it goes into production and I have to fix for the unexpected, but it's also possible that was one of those problems which doesn't really need explicit lifetimes
That's why I made the hypothesis that the res behind the function was a thread/agent
but I can't exclude that OP is like most of us just somebody who don't master the English language...
I engaged in several hours of work just to try finding the best locations to cut the long statuses of broot so that they fit in the console's width and are still clear...
(it's the night here, I'm free to do silly things)