> So what's the catch here - how is this even possible?
The catch is that we're storing nodes inside a Vec instead of relying on malloc, Box, Rc, or something like that. This way we can access nodes by indexing into the Vec instead of dereferencing a pointer, which gives us a lot of freedom in escaping the borrow checker.
Actually, we're not using a Vec directly, but a thin wrapper around it called Slab.
Q: This is cheating - a real doubly linked list must allocate nodes on the heap.
Why? If you really need to allocate stuff on the heap, just use List<Box<T>>. Alternatively, you can als…