@DenysSéguret I believe both of you are correct. On one hand from semantics PoV, there's no difference between p and p/ (or in fact p// or p////). And as such the Path not acting differently in these situations seems to me as a correct behaviour. OTOH as you said, a shit load of tools treating the trailing slash semantically different (e.g. .gitignore files) which is a good thing, helps the user easily and quickly describe what they want. I believe this extra logic therefore must be
you said I have to consider? well, 1) I want to upvote as answer. I'm grad if you rewite as Answer. 2) I don't know how to close myself. any backdoor for asker? — v..snow1 min ago
what ?
damm answer few questions and I'm already piss off
@Shepmaster That used to hit me a few years ago... then I sort of disciplined myself by stabbing a slash almost everywhere regardless of the command. :|
I've forgotten how useless sometimes comments on SO can be. Thanks for the reminder :) — Nick6 mins ago
I've not forgotten how stupid are questions on SO can be. What you want we say ? you didn't provide ANY context. We can only repeat what miri already tell you. — Stargateur17 secs ago
#[must_use] has no effect on async functions. what are my alternatives? I've started creating a MustUse<_> wrapper type, but maybe I'm overlooking a simpler option?
Hi everyone, I'm struggling with iterator API design. I have a working iterator that hands out immutable pixel references (of an image). That works fine, see: github.com/raymanfx/ffimage/blob/next/src/packed/image.rs#L144. Now I tried to introduce an iterator that hands out mutable references, but I'm getting yelled at by the compiler: github.com/raymanfx/ffimage/commit/…. See the associated CI pipeline for build errors.
My first issue is understanding why the code with the immutable references works fine, but the mutable references pose an impossible case as far as lifetimes are concerned.
I'd greatly appreciate it if someone could take a brief look at the code (it's all in that GitHub repo). I tried to create a minimal example, but there's too many traits and structs involved.
I have created a data structure in Rust and I want to create iterators for it. Immutable iterators are easy enough. I currently have this, and it works fine:
// This is a mock of the "real" EdgeIndexes class as
// the one in my real program is somewhat complex, but
// of identical type
struct E...
is it because my iterator tries to hand out references with lifetime 'a and they are not bound to the lifetime of the image instance?
(that's what I get from looking at that answer)
The answer is a bit confusing since it mutably borrows twice, I can see that easily. I don't see it that clearly for my code (or the code from the question) though.
Isn't the previous reference automatically invalidated when accessing the next element of the iterator?
I'm re-reading the reference section in the book to see if I missed something.
Ah, I think I'm confused in the same way as the person commenting on that answer.
"When I ask mutable iterator for next mutable reference, doesn't compiler know that the previous mutable reference is not used anymore and iterator could be unfreezed?"
I feel like this is missing from the book though. The comment above the mem::transmute block in your answer explains it very clearly, but there's no section in the book about this ("Iterator invalidation" does not cover it IMO).
@Shepmaster the first of these two corresponds to my case
I think I have another way of doing it in my program; I'd rather not introduce a this identifier in all invocations of this macro because most of them don't need this/self