I can't figure it out why my local var line does not live long enough. You can see bellow my code. It work on the Rust's playground.
I may have an idea of the issue: I use a structure (load is a function of this structure). As I want to store the result of the line in a member of my struct, it ...
I'm making a Discord chat bot using discord-rs, starting from this example. Everything was working and compiling fine until I tried to modify a value that is declared before a loop.
I'm trying to change prefix to the second word that is entered in a command:
extern crate discord;
use discord::D...
@Shepmaster well I'm tempted to focus on the non-loop version where the fix is moving the input declaration to the top of main (or just switching to the 2018 edition)
@hellow There's no introspection in Rust, you can't try to invoke a constructor with no parameter and hope it works in generic code: a trait MUST describe the available functionality. Using Default is the way to ensure that whoever wishes to use the struct where Default is required will be able to without wrapping it.
To create a default struct, I used to see fn new() -> Self in Rust, but today, I discovered Default. So there are two ways to create a default struct:
struct Point {
x: i32,
y: i32,
}
impl Point {
fn new() -> Self {
Point {
x: 0,
y: 0,
}
}...
First off let me start by saying I know about a highly popular request on the main meta. However that is status-declined and hasn't had any official response for a while now.
I have also seen related support requests and even another feature request from 2014 but that again is status-declined.
...
@BartekBanachewicz farming karma is go on javascript/C/whatever popular and answer every god damn question that have already be answered 50 times, and get upvote
I would like to push a file, let call it .config, to collab version control. But by default, its ignore all hidden files. How can I force a file to be add ? I look in .collabignore but it's doesn't look there is the rule .*. I also search but didn't find any thing that would fix the problem.
Wit...
@DenysSéguret seeing the up/downvote ratio is something that takes a certain amount of rep, so you could easily fool those people. I'd probably just assume someone downvoted and then undownvoted.
The first thing I always do is running clippy.
You will catch some things that are not neccessary, e.g.
fn main() -> () can be reduced to fn main()
let t = String::from(convert_type); is simply let t = convert_type
The bad things are
c * (9 / 5) which is always c because of integer arithm...
BTW my code still has the possible bugs of the unsafe pointer operations you do when playing with graphs ... except it's made from operation on integers used to fetch things in arrays, instead of directly mem access...