@Shepmaster It does, but that is a different story. There is a reason why it's called nightly and I believe the Rust community has this bad habit / practice of relying on it. If you are a core a developer, or someone closely working with them, or a tester, etc. then sure, use it, that's what it is for. But if you are a library or application developer whose stuff goes into production and other people rely on it then stay away.
@Shepmaster That sounds like an interesting setup, I read others who run both on their CI just to see if any upcoming changes are going to break their code. For me this latter approach could make sense but as I said I would not use it as a production-ready development tool -- because it is not.
@Stargateur Oh, I used the nightly before, several times actually, I'm quite aware of how it works. (Or how nightlies, alphas, betas, dev-snapshots, etc. supposed to work.)
@E4netisheretodownvote That is my average is well when things go very, very well. Wise people say though, it would be better if it would be +195 -778 ;)
@PeterVaro *I read about others who run both versions [...]
@PeterVaro I've had my share of PRs of that nature too. But it's worth mentioning that DICOM-rs is definitely in the growing phase, many parts of the standard are yet to be covered.
@Shepmaster I ran into such a situation once. IIRC the rsync command has different behavior depending on whether the trailing / is included. I was writing a backup utility and I had to manually check whether the user-provided path ended with a slash before handing it on to rsync
When the user types /a/b you don't have the same information than if he types /a/b/. In the second case you know it means a directory. And you don't need a filesystem to reason about paths
Imagine a user types a and you want to propose completions. You can propose the a directory but also the ab file. If the use typed a/, you can't propose the ab file but you should propose the children of the a directory
There are places in broot where I must keep a string instead of a pathbuf, and places where I awkwardly do to_string_lossy().to_string() because I can't directly read the / from the components
I'm trying to persistent raw OS file names to storage, so I need to get the raw bytes of an OsStr.
It seems possible to call as_bytes() on *nix platforms, but that isn't defined on MS Windows.
Is there a portable way to convert OsStr to bytes?
Have you ever wondered why we call the second associated type of IntoIterator as IntoIter? Why is it not just Iter? It doesn't make any sense.. (In case one would think that would collide with std::slice::Iter and other similar names.. well, we have this pretty cool feature called namespaces so I don't think so.. The only reason I could think of is the similar spelling between Item and Iter.. but that's still not a good enough reason for me..)
@Stargateur well, you can write C extensions and pause / ignore the GIL for good.. so you know.. for the price of a single Python function call.. XD XD XD
Can you please include the full error message in the question? And while you are at it, it's also a good idea to actually read it in full – Rust's error messages are often very helpful. — Sven Marnach2 mins ago
when sven steal my style you know the question is bad
@trentcl If it makes you feel any better, many people still call it "too broad".
So you should keep using it. If enough "innocent bystanders" complain that their posts with a single question were closed with this reason, then that will probably fuel a change.