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02:04
@MatthieuM. what did I miss with this question? My answer seems too easy
0
A: How to get the lower bound and upper bound of an element in Rust BTreeSet?

Shepmaster but what if I don't know the range Then use an unbounded range: use std::collections::BTreeSet; fn main() { let tree: BTreeSet<_> = [1, 3, 5].iter().cloned().collect(); let mut before = tree.range(..2); let mut after = tree.range(2..); println!("greatest less than 2: {:?}...

I will just iterate on the set myself
or use doubleiterator as OP suggest
you talking about the new Q or the one I just found?
the new Q
Yeah, they can't do what they want
02:24
interesting question
I wonder what is the use case of this feature
@Stargateur I've had reasonable success with asking OPs that in comments. You have to make sure it doesn't sound like an attack though.
> It doesn't matter for your question, but I'm curious why you need to do ..., it seems interesting to me.
Like that
done
by the way what is the complexity of split_off ?
look like it's a little heavy
02:48
look like the only way would be to implement it inside the API
or have an API who allow to explore the Btree ourself
 
4 hours later…
06:38
@Shepmaster I would not say too easy, it requires creating ranges and poking around after all.
07:12
@MatthieuM. I mean more like is there a reason that a range based answer wasn't given? Does my answer solve the question, did I miss something?
@Stargateur yeah I think that's the cursor API that doesn't exist
@MatthieuM. Your code is better, because you won't panic if the vector has length 0, but get a None instead. And you beat me by seconds :D
@LukasKalbertodt: Thanks for the praise :D Took me an embarrassingly long time because I wanted to link all methods as it seems we are dealing with a newcomer :)
Yeah, seems like it.
By the way, you might wanna remove the type annotation Vec<f64> and add a f64 postfix to the first number, like I did. I think this is preferred? But not sure actually...
@LukasKalbertodt Done. Also added the stray abs as I don't think the question makes much sense otherwise.
How is it possible that this code compiles? stackoverflow.com/a/50343342/4498831
It seems that references to a local variable are returned
07:32
@Boiethios Did you mean to link/anchor to your answer? Or are you referring to the question?
@LukasKalbertodt I solved the OP's issue, the code compiles, but it shouldn't IMO
@Shepmaster I see, I may have missed it but did you /need/ a language level 128bit type for the compiler to be able to optimise that?
@LukasKalbertodt Minimal code ->
What local variable do you think is referenced in the returned value? The only thing referenced is self.board which is fine since the lifetimes already mention that. x and y aren't references
fn get_iter() -> impl Iterator<Item = i32> {
    [1, 2, 3].iter().map(|&i| i)
}

fn main() {
    let _i = get_iter();
}
Maybe I could ask this question, but I wonder if it would be a good one
[1, 2, 3] is a local variable, and it is borrowed by iter
07:54
Mh interesting, this is actually an interesting question °_° Considering that the iterator is lazy...
So I'd say, go ahead and ask the question ;-)
Altho I already have a suspicion what's happening here
Let's go!
So you are writing the question now? I can't guarantee you btw that this isn't a duplicate...
@LukasKalbertodt Yes, I'm writing it
But I struggle to find a good title
Done
Very nice ^_^ I already answered
I prepared the answer locally and just copied it into the answer field and immediately pressed submit. I got a "Are you a human?" verification :D nice
@LukasKalbertodt Thank you, the answer seems simple once you read it :p
08:06
@Boiethios Yeah but it's a good question nevertheless. Was confused for some time too :D Luckily I remembered this static promotion thingy.
This kind of silent promotion is quite confusing, tho
Yes. It is. I'm surprised it didn't have an ammendment to have a warning or something. Although, what's to warn about?
I understand the motivations for the RFC but.
The immediate follow-up question is: Where does that leave const? @LukasKalbertodt ?
08:22
@Cosmo When I think about it, this RFC is quite logical because fn foo() -> &'static str { "hello" } always worked
fn foo() -> &'static i32 { &42 } is only an extension of this
@Boiethios yes it's very logical, I like it. I just really want to know for sure where it leaves const
Also, it's been a long time since I dug deep into rust and I have only really used it for writing game AI (for competitions). But, I don't remember const qualification on functinos in rust, what does it do?
@Cosmo That's an equivalent of C++ constexpr
ohh okie
08:58
@Cosmo Note that this is a feature under construction. You cannot have conditions inside a const fn right now, for example
I see o:
 
3 hours later…
11:51
@Boiethios I'm a little torn on your answer. It fixes the error but it changes the function signature
12:03
@trentcl That's mandatory
@Boiethios how do you figure?
@trentcl You cannot have an anonymous lifetime for &mut self if you borrow it again
> cannot infer an appropriate lifetime due to conflicting requirements
@Boiethios You don't need to borrow self for longer than the lifetime of the Iterator
you're borrowing it for as long as the Points last
It works if you change the signature to fn neighbors<'b>(&'b self) -> impl 'b + Iterator<Item = Point<'a>>
Oh you're right. Or fn neighbors<'b: 'a>(&'b self) -> impl Iterator<Item = Point<'a>>
however I am still changing the signature so I'll give you that
I think the inferred version is fn neighbors<'b>(&'b self) -> impl 'a + Iterator<Item = Point<'a>>
12:17
Thanks for the point, I'll edit the answer
There should be a way to move all of self.board, self.x and self.y into the closure and make the original signature work
since they're all Copy
@trentcl self.board does not
actually I don't understand why put board into point
@Boiethios & references are Copy, only &mut references are not
@Stargateur Maybe bounds checking?
@trentcl should be board who do that
so this way don't help
12:24
@trentcl Oh yes.
@Stargateur It does seem a bit circuitous, but I will assume it makes sense in context until proven otherwise :)
@Boiethios actually that still doesn't do the same thing, in my version 'a: 'b
12:41
@trentcl : means outlives, so I'm pretty sure that's 'b: 'a because self must outlives references to it
13:14
@Boiethios The Points yielded by the Iterator don't contain any references to self.
'b: 'a makes the compiler shrink down the lifetime 'a until the returned Point<'a>s have a shorter lifetime than the borrow &'b self
well, shorter-or-equal
If you have another proposal, please post it
@Boiethios Ok, but you should revert the edit to your answer because what you have there now is the same as the original formulation
@trentcl Sure
I'll work on an answer
13:32
@trentcl Will you use this? fn neighbors<'b>(&'b self) -> impl 'b + Iterator<Item = Point<'a>>
@Boiethios yeah
I'm not really working on it now, if you want to incorporate it into your answer that is fine
I still think there's a way to do it without changing the original signature
@trentcl Well, I'll do this, and if you can do this without changing the signature, your answer will be better
@Boiethios Ok
It's a race then
I am at work, I don't have time for this
13:44
@trentcl that's quitter talk
@Boiethios Why is adding a lifetime to a trait with the plus operator (Iterator<Item = &Foo> + 'a) needed?
5
Q: Why is adding a lifetime to a trait with the plus operator (Iterator<Item = &Foo> + 'a) needed?

torkleyyI'm applying a closure on the iterator and I want to use stable, so I want to return a boxed Iterator. The obvious way to do so is the following: struct Foo; fn into_iterator(myvec: &Vec<Foo>) -> Box<Iterator<Item = &Foo>> { Box::new(myvec.iter()) } This fails because the borrow checker c...

^
Oh
@Shepmaster Should I delete my question, or is it relevant for searching purpose?
I'm cool with a dupe
if you agree it is
@Shepmaster I'm reading the answer
@Shepmaster Are you sure that it is a dupe? Box needs a lifetime (that is static by default) because it represents a reference to the heap; but impl is doing some static dispatch, so that's not the same case, isn't it?
It's not about Box, it's about a trait
although I was about to say trait object, which impl trait is not
@Shepmaster This is the point on which I struggle. The "impl trait" is in the stack, doesn't it?
So the lifetime is "obvious"? I mean, the compiler does not need help to know it
13:56
@Boiethios stack doesn't matter here
it's not the lifetime of the iterator
it's the lifetime of references contained within the iterator
What I don't understand is why impl Iterator<...> + 'a is inferred. I feel like it should infer + 'static and complain about that because the returned value contains non-'static references
@trentcl is it at least consistent with trait objects?
not sure yet
@Shepmaster In the answer you linked as a potential duplicate, I read:
> Now the compiler knows that the trait object is only valid for the lifetime 'a
The trait object == the iterator
@trentcl let Point { board, x, y } = *self; so much prettier ;-)
13:59
the duplicate doesn't answer the question of boiethios
@Stargateur If this is another usecase of + 'a, I could enhance my question, like: "what is the difference with it?"
@Shepmaster doesn't look like it
@Shepmaster is it possible to use the sxd-document+xpath combo to add an element to an existing XML based on some xPath?
@Boiethios yep
this works but if you remove the 'a + it fails
whereas this works just fine
@Shepmaster So, do you think this is a duplicate?
@Boiethios hmmm
The meaning of the syntax is the same, AFAICT
But if the defaults are different, then it's annoying as a duplicate.
Makes me wish there were 3 separate questions
@Shepmaster aww yiss, something like that indeed
thx
@ljedrz you are at least the second person to ask; should it be made into an example or something?
@trentcl did you catch that I had to split my iterator onto two lines? You nicely solved that.
@Shepmaster So how should I edit the question?
14:09
@Shepmaster I think it would be a good idea; there's never too many good examples
@Shepmaster ha, that was purely accidental
@Boiethios I think you should add a link to the Q I posted in your Q. Something like "I read this but I'm not sure if the same logic applies" blah blah
@Shepmaster Done. I added that I wrote in the chat
14:46
Box<impl 'a + Iterator<Item = u32>> heh
@Shepmaster Hm. I sure there are times when it's the right return type...
@PeterHall i cant imagine when
like i might file a clippy issue for it
@Shepmaster Yeah...
When some other function expects a Box<T> for some reason
But then you'd box it as you pass it
Oh man.... "nested impl Trait is not allowed"
I just wanted to do: impl Deref<impl 'a + Iterator<Item = u32>>
@PeterHall pls stahp
actually that's good to know, if also somewhat horrifying
15:08
@PeterHall I wonder if there's an implicit "... yet" there
@PeterHall I wonder what the split is on the lifetime thinking
fn main() {
    assert!("Go" < "Rust");
}
How many think as I do, vs how you do
don't ask why, we just have a conversation that finish with this code ;)
"i am sorry for my poor code formatting ." — not sorry for the English formatting apparently.
I was going to start editing, but I just know shep is already half way through
nope baby
15:11
@Shepmaster It feels like it should work. But maybe it works in the obvious cases that I'm thinking of, but the non-working cases would be confusing
n as usize ;
how do you even handle spaces like that
would drive me insane
@Shepmaster that trigger so hard
"Shisui Uchiha", trigger even harder ;)
@PeterHall note their previous Q - stackoverflow.com/questions/50187031/…
it seems to be the same root problem - indexing with u64
I enjoyed this line: let mut x = 0; ;
@Shepmaster oh... that this OP xd
do we close as duplicate ? xd
15:18
I started editing but reverted without saving because I don't know how to parse the first [I want to call it a] sentence.
WTF is this question?
@Boiethios we call that a bad question
I like the "i am sorry for my poor code formatting ."
It's errors to do with trying to use an i64 as an index
"please help ! and please explain exactly what is wrong" is much more fun
15:21
@Stargateur "Everything is wrong"
@PeterHall I'm on it
Also, I don't think he is truly repentant about his code formatting.
@PeterHall: I doubt so, if he was he would have made some effort
@MatthieuM. One do not even needs to do some effort, Rustfmt does all the stuff
@Boiethios They may not know about the playground...
15:24
@MatthieuM. Everything is written there
@Boiethios do you really think this kind of user read doc ?
@Boiethios If you expect people to read about the rules beforehand...
@Stargateur I doubt this kind of user reads his own code except during the exact second that he types each character.
My eyes bleed each time I see this kind of stuff:
let mut a: Vec<i64> = Vec::new();
let mut n = 0;
loop {
    n = n + 1;
    a.push(n);
    if n > 3000000 {
        break;
    }
}
15:44
Related to talking about the wiki, I added some MCVE stuff to the tag wiki. Could be useful for common tags.
Hi @Shepmaster!
I was slightly mistaken both ways--it's adding the extern crate winapi line to main.rs that causes the issue.
And it causes the issue with both short and long names.
I still need to try it on my C: drive.
@OnorioCatenacci is this a corporate environment? Might there be virus scanners in play (either locally or on the remote system)?
Good point.
I've got a separate Windows 10 VM I can try this on myself. Trying the C: drive right now.
Hmm...it must be something about the U: drive. It doesn't happen on C--even when I add the extern crate winapi line.
Or it may be a combination of the two; I used a short name on the C: drive--but since I did the same on the U: drive that doesn't seem as if it would be it.
I suspect I should probably file a bug but I'm not sure I've isolated the issue tightly enough yet. What do you think?
@OnorioCatenacci I used the long name on my Win10 VM
@Shepmaster Yeah it's definitely something about the network drive. I just tried the long name on the C: drive and it worked just fine.
15:53
@OnorioCatenacci Personally, I prefer to do as much legwork as I can before filing a bug. You could search for existing bugs of course. Only when I run out of troubleshooting steps would I file an issue asking for help with finding more.
@Shepmaster Well thanks for all the help up to this point!
I'm still a bit new to Rust so I figured I must be missing something obvious. Good to know that it's not some dumb mistake I've made (in terms of syntax). :)
@Shepmaster I believe I'll just close up the question since either way (known bug or new bug) it's not really something for SO.
Rust generics do not use SFINAE like in C++ but are semantic. Read more about them. — Boiethios 7 mins ago
@Boiethios SFINAE ?
Substitution failure is not an error (SFINAE) refers to a situation in C++ where an invalid substitution of template parameters is not in itself an error. David Vandevoorde first introduced the acronym SFINAE to describe related programming techniques. Specifically, when creating a candidate set for overload resolution, some (or all) candidates of that set may be the result of instantiated templates with (potentially deduced) template arguments substituted for the corresponding template parameters. If an error occurs during the substitution of a set of arguments for any given template, the compiler...
omg it's mean something xd
I was thinking about a tipo
15:56
A tipo? :P
That's the way C++ do generic stuff
@PeterHall this one is far more commun ;) AFAIK
Thanks again for all the help and pointers @Shepmaster!
@OnorioCatenacci no problem. Hope you have fun with Rust!
16:12
@Boiethios I'm very sympathetic to the OP in that case. I still remember learning Ruby after C. Ruby has map on arrays and ranges, so my mind was blown when I realized I didn't have to write that damned initialization for loop ever again.
And then I had to write more C 😭
And then when learning Clojure, I realized that map didn't have to be eager and that lazy sequences are pretty sweet. And then Rust brought it all back full circle.
@Shepmaster Yes, the real issue is that most of developer think that there are only C-family languages. IT schools should create more open-minded and educated developers.
Everytime I see a new language, I am glad to write some stuff with it only to evaluate what is original in it
@Shepmaster C is love
I even saw some developers that never heard of functional languages.
Why would anyone upvote this. :<
On that subject, I am regretfully not very surprised. Some degrees in computer engineering do not teach a single purely functional programming language, or might only couple the concept into some other lame multi-paradigm programming language.
17:18
> lame multi-paradigm programming language.
like Rust?
@E_net4 How to make a safe language unsafe :p
posted on May 15, 2018

Three years ago today, the Rust community released Rust 1.0 to the world, with our initial vision of fearless systems programming. As per tradition, we’ll celebrate Rust’s birthday by taking stock of the people and the product, and especially of what’s happened in the last year. The People Rust is a people-centric, consensus-driven project. Some of the most exciting developments over the la

3
17:40
should wear my rust 1.0 shirt i suppose
18:17
@Boiethios nice try ;)
Won't this change what should be an O(log N) operation into O(N)? — Shepmaster 2 hours ago
@Boiethios rust ?
18:44
@Stargateur: I am trying to build a replicate physical changes to a large data-structure backed by a logical array. I would like to keep track of changed ranges so that I can send efficient delta updates. The replication is not realtime but async and lazy; if a sub-range has changed multiple times I don't want to send every change, just the minimum set to replicate the difference. The reason I need an exclusive search is to be able to efficiently coalesce adjacent modified ranges. — MasterWindu 23 mins ago
I think there is a better solution this "feature"
why not two difference ?
@Stargateur why not send two, you mean?
for exemple
It's not clear what OP is doing
@Stargateur yeah, they seem to skip parts when writing
somethink like that would be very effective
haha, Op rename "user9791349" => "MasterWindu", a much better name ;)
19:10
I believe your question is answered by the answers of Lifetimes for method returning iterator of structs with same lifetime. TL;DR: pub fn looper<'a>(&'a self, l: Vec<Child>) -> impl Iterator<Item = Result<Child, ()>> +'a and add move to your closures. If you disagree, please edit your question to explain the differences. Otherwise, we can mark this question as already answered. — Shepmaster 35 secs ago
at least I have fixed the code like you ;)
@Stargateur it's easy to fix problems when we can remember answers for 12 hours ;-)
fun fact I didn't read the answer xd
what's real annoying is that this problem is exactly the same as trait objects, boxed or otherwise
but we are going to get a slew of questions from people who haven't used trait objects

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