"In particular you should move on should a rollback war looks like it's going to start - i.e. the OP has rolled back the rollback. We'll get notifications and deal with it appropriately."
Don't raise a flag when an edit war is happening. A flag was already raised automatically!
From ChrisF's self-answer:
Per-post flags
(...)
too many edits (auto) - an author edited their post more than a certain number of times
In the question you can read:
I recently had a...
@Shepmaster Remember me wondering why people starred my repository? People continue to do so and I got so curious that I wrote a mail to one person who starred it. Their answer: "I starred it because Shepmaster starred it. I follow him." ... Dang!
@Shepmaster Aha! The second and third one who starred during the last two days were following the first one on GitHub! Maybe it's indeed simply because of GitHub's social aspect. Crazy!
@набиячлэвэли Good one of course :P It's just your particular way of formulating stuff. Not what you would read usually on the interwebz. Long sentences with many parens :P
@набиячлэвэли Just dependencies, actually. If they are in the same context but one is not the dependency of another, a workspace will still build both.
if you check out that repo and do cargo build --all, it will build the library 1x, then each binary's main 1x. Building the binary will not have its own copy of the compiled library
AKA: there's only one target directory for everything in the workspace
if there wasn't a workspace, you'd build (binary1 + library) + (binary2 + library)
@LukasKalbertodt Ah, yes, the ole doing-a-talk-every-time-I-type phenomenon :P English is not the greatest language for long sentences anyway, my standard in Polish is a bit higher (the most I've transcribed here is 331 words :P)
@Shepmaster wait, so it's just a very long workaround to symlinking everything to a common target (which is not a problem were you to have a singular Cargo.toml (which might be undesirable sometimes))?
I have all my code on a 14GB (was 4GB so I could trivially transfer it to a removable medium but it grew :v) drive (I'm on Windows), so I just symlink all my targets to s:/Rust-target (where s: is my everything/dump drive)
a lot of the build intermediates and results are common and I've a simple way to access all binaries now so win-win-win v0v
(also when cargo's linker handling fucks up there's only one place to fix it in so another win there)
doing any manual maintenance on target size would be too much time invested
now I just mindlessly offload it to s: which is 1TB v0v
and Rust-target pales in comparison to the 250+GB of my raw, intermediate, and rendered videos I have there, 55GB of smartphone OSes, another 50+GB of generative art, etc. v0v
it's a cost-effort balance and cost is effectively zero so any effort would be too much effort
I have VMs, Rust/npm/maven build trees, medical imaging data sets, and deep learning TF models and summaries, which actually take up quite a lot more space than one would think.
I have to keep most data sets in an external 3 TB HDD.
I've had this computer for ~6 years, and only relatively recently have I been hitting the limits. I def. plan on getting 512 in the next one; 1TB SSD, while pricey, isn't out of the question