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01:01
You got a new competing answer
 
2 hours later…
02:59
@Stargateur I think the question isn't so much about specific types
but if you have a pointer to a byte in the middle of something bigger, is it undefined behavior to read that something bigger
as mentioned in the OP, this can come up in SIMD
I run into this in github.com/shepmaster/jetscii
which reads in chunks of 16 bytes
so if someone has a &mut [u8] covering bytes 0-8 and a &[u8] for bytes 8-999, and I read the 16 bytes from 0-16, did I do a bad thing?
 
4 hours later…
06:45
SO is my favorite rubber duck :)
@Boiethios Everyone has his own technique, my tech is to go sleep and when I wake up, I magically solve the problem when I was sleeping... this has happen to me a lot ;)
@Stargateur Sure, but this is not the moment to sleep right now, I just woke up :p
I could sleep forever
Well, I undelete the question because I found one issue but I didn't find the whole answer.
I am not sure if this is a duplicate, but I could not find a related question
@Shepmaster Thanks for notifying me. Interesting idea in the other answer. I totally forgot about this answer of mine. Only two points on the answer on a 15 point question... what a shame. But my answer could use some editing too. Will do so later.
07:00
117
A: We're more aggressively enforcing self-moderation in chat

Benjamin GruenbaumThis sounds perfectly reasonable and I support this stance. Stack Overflow should not stand for abuse nor should it tolerate it. Thank you for this. Questions? Observations? Anything else? Not once has a community manager asked chat users how we're doing during the 5 years I've been here, whe...

I was reading this question and I like this answer that is resume to "we ask you feature for chat from years but you never do anything" XD
Most of feature request for chat are ignore or one SO staff answer, yes we should do that, but never do anything ;)
@Boiethios compile can't infer B template
@Stargateur Yes, but why? That's the question. B should be [T] to me, when I read the code.
this is nothing that contraint B type
Even when I force a default inference like fn test_eq<T, U, B = [T]> (with #![allow(invalid_type_param_default)], that still does not work
07:21
Well this last solution don't make sense
@Boiethios there could be multiple B fulfilling the requirement, so you need to manually specify it; but [T] is not one of them.
@Stefan But in this very case, what are the other candidates?
@Boiethios The compiler doesn't care whether there are other candidates, just that their could be. It won't go searching for them. (This also means adding more Borrow impls doesn't break compatibility)
@Stefan Oh, I understand now. There is a name for this rule, but I do not remember it.
07:51
The lask question looks like a trolling one.
question from one reputation user are often very bad
I was writing a comment "Rust is not C" but even in C you can write a better code (with for or while, e.g.)
I can write very beatiful code in C, actually I think C is one of the language where the code is very clean
@Stargateur I agree, but you need to be very careful and rigorous
The question was another XY problem…
 
1 hour later…
09:20
when your answer on meta don't get any vote, youtu.be/ussCHoQttyQ
 
4 hours later…
13:50
play.rust-lang.org/… - anyone tried boxing a trait that derives from a trait with associated types which are bound in the derive yet?
14:08
So basically OP downvote me and then change his question...
nope, that was me.
well my answer fix the error
no, yes, ? you don't agree ?
a "What is going on?" question rarely just means "How do I fix it", it also asks for an explanation why it doesn't work. Your answer doesn't indicate any curiousity about the problem or how to avoid the problem in general, or how to fix the problem in the compiler (because the message is completely fucked up and useless). Just rearraning the code until it compiles is not a good answer.
well, I agree in fact in the beginning I was planning to write a comment
But the answer is clear
@Stefan I'd disagree with "rarely" — to my sadness, a lot of people don't care about the why
14:15
this isn't a bug of the compiler
But I agree that the fix and the why generally go well together
why is just compiler go to a recursive infinite of inference
I don't see what add
answer why in this question is a little off topic in my opinion
however OP change the question
now I think we could close as duplicate
now there is two question
then it wasn't worth answering before either
1. But it gives this error. What is going on?
2. But I believe conn.borrow should work as well
As @Shepmaster just said: the fix and the why generally go well together
14:29
The explanation is out of my league
 
8 hours later…
22:15
ah the time allowed to edit a comment is really too little !

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