i do have one question; is there an up-to-date spec for Rust? it seems like people mostly follow release notes from one version to another to find out new features and changes, but for a newcomer, i could not find a comprehensive spec.
@Shepmaster I mean in the sense of the Java or Scala language spec; the definitive truth about every language construct and semantics, kept up-to-date. The final arbiter of correctness for a Rust program.
OK, yeah. Then the reference would be the appropriate thing, but as mentioned, it isn't always kept up to date
I'm sure that eventually they will align
but it feels a bit over-bureaucratic at this point (IMO)
@Cagatay I do think it's interesting for a newcomer to want to jump straight to the spec. I usually only turn to a spec when I get realllllly far into the weeds and need to figure out some tricky detail.
Yeah, the human-focused docs are pretty good. If you are just getting started, there's an improved version of TRPL in the works - rust-lang.github.io/book
I'd recommend reading that version until you run out of text, then switching back to the current book
@Shepmaster Yes agreed, the spec is not the first thing in my mind when i start learning a brand-new language. I will admit to keeping it open for reference for when the guides/tutorials fail me in explaining some detail.
@Shepmaster ooh, i had not seen that, thank you!
@Shepmaster i will also sheepishly admit to being a bit of a language lawyer when cornered :) for now, i'm finding Rust really well thought-out.