I have two structs:
struct A {
map: HashMap<u32, Vec<B>>,
}
struct B {
weak: Weak<A>
}
How I can construct A with some values filled in map? map will never be mutated after construction.
My first thought was HashMap::get_mut, but this is not possible:
Returns a mutable reference...
To those who are familiar with link-local networks the question was perfectly clear; I hope you don't mind me expanding on it in your question. the8472's idea might work. @Stargateur if you don't know about link-local maybe do some research first before giving really stupid advice. The point of link-local is that it does overlap, you can't configure routes to specific IPs through the OS. — Stefan6 hours ago
Also, before I post this edit, is this a "safe" use of UnsafeCell? https://play.rust-lang.org/?gist=cce332126550abd5a0353faefae379a8&version=stable&mode=debug
I don't understand the discussion; there are no performance concerns cited in the question, and with no example usage provided it's hard to a-priori understand which usecase privilege (or not).
It's not even made clear how the instances A and B are supposed to be linked together; that is, whether Weak<A> always represents the parent of B or whether it could point to anotherA which could in turn contain a B which points to the parent of the first.
> I try to avoid runtime-checks when accessing map, because after construction, it will never be modified again. I have no problem using unsafe code or approved nightly features.
@Stargateur Let me clear about this: you way too often tell people what the "right thing" is with zero or less knowledge about the topic. Rolling back my edit just because you don't like me (and with no obvious technical reason) is so childish I won't comment on it further.
@Shepmaster I reduced my presence in this chatroom because I couldn't take reading all the stupid things that were being posted in this channel by a certain someone. Not directly your fault, but maybe think about the "net positive effect" in this context too. I don't think I'll come back to this channel, but feel free to contact me if you need me.
@Stefan FWIW, I'm of two minds regarding the edit. I do think that your edit made the question better, but it also put a lot of words in the mouth of the OP. That's something that's always a little dicey to do.
@Stargateur I also agree with the point that your comments are frequently very terse and can easily be seen as both rude and unwelcoming. I don't think this one in particular is bad, however.
@trentcl any idea what a safe interface might look like?
@Shepmaster I try my best, on this question I just said "I think", I don't understand why stefan is so angry about me, but I don't care... I just wonder why he doesn't answer the question if he has so much knowledge, and I still think my comment is valid, and I think I have good knowledge of networking.
There is possibly a nice opportunity for a library, with a container that lets you mutate for initialization and then becomes a zero-cost wrapper after
@Stargateur Yes, I believe that "I think" is a good thing to have added here. Likewise, I don't have any knowledge of this so I just directly questioned statements that the OP made in an attempt to learn more and have OP expand.
@PeterHall can't you return a from the Ok branch?
@PeterHall oh, wait, I see. That's the only strong reference.
@Shepmaster If the OP would haved reverted my edit I wouldn't care; I think my first comment (which got deleted thanks to some stupid moderator) would have encouraged him to revert or edit it again if he didn't agree with it.
@Stargateur I wouldn't claim you actually know you have no idea about some of topics you talk about. But you really are fucking wrong. I remember our last discussion about casting malloc results, and it seems to always go the same way.
@PeterHall I wonder if placement new would help here, as it conceptually gives you the ability to have "the memory where this value will ultimately go"
@Stefan yeah, I have zero knowledge in C... please stop insult me, that goning to angry me. Tell me where and why I'm wrong but don't tell me I'm childish or that I don't know what I'm talking about.
@Stefan "stupid moderator"..., you serious ? I will not flag this because you could be ban but please, if you need to justified your edit add this information in the edit info ! not in comment ! comment are volatile. Your edit extrapolate so much what OP ask that I revert it, just a fact, that could be someone else I would rollback it too.
@Stefan @Stargateur Howdy boys! Let's tone it down please, there are much more important things in life than an "edit" and a "revert", and there's REALLY no need for name calling and vulgarities here.
@PeterHall @trentcl @Shepmaster: For what it's worth, I tried my hand at the question, shamelessly borrowing from crossbeam.
@trentcl Should be no difference. And a little more convenient to use. You can be fairly confident that the size of UnsafeCell will never change in the future too
@PeterHall That's what I'm thinking too. But I can't seem to put it in a module while ruling out the possibility that someone will do something bad in the initialization step
I'm trying to implement log4rs by following
https://docs.rs/log4rs/0.8.0/log4rs/ but getting the following error:
thread 'main' panicked at 'called Result::unwrap() on an Err
value: Log4rs(Os { code: 2, kind: NotFound, message: "No such file or
directory" })', libcore/result.rs:945:5
...