@Shepmaster Here's what a noob (asking for a friend) would like to see in the documentation of snafu: - what's exactly `context` ? A kind of unwrap decorator ? How exactly is it added ? - what's the added cost (unwrapping complexity, structure creation before errors) ? - what are the limits and problems of snafu ? - how does it compare to other approachs (for example custom_errors) ? - does the Error enum automatically implement Display ? - are there facilities to display the stacktrace on error ?
not really compatible windows (you need to install either a terminal or ncurses), right ?
I'm not interested in the high level parts of TUI. I'd be happy with something low level like termion, crossterm or pancurses, but not too buggy and really cross-platform...
I guess I should try and contribute to crossterm :\
@Shepmaster That's true. I cannot put the finger on the why, but when I use the Rust error system, it feels much easier that the one of the DOTNET ecosystem.
@FrenchBoiethios I agree with you, but I really can't figure out what the difference is
I wrote the Rust cuba bindings, and I know it's not perfect. I didn't find a better way to get some form of memory safety other than letting the user use the core id that the C cuba library hands over. Do you think the issue is in the bindings or in the way that Cuba handles its multithreading? — Ben Ruijl34 secs ago
That.. also doesn't seem uncommon? I was under the impression that most images I see in a day were put there by someone who built or owns the app.. not by me.
Right. That's true, but my point is that from memory (preloaded in the executable), or from disk, or from net.. as far as a UI is concerned, should be the same (modulo error-handling)
If you have a way to report on it's loading status, you could display that, I guess.
Actually, I call example() from main itself. The codebase is huge and it's almost impossible to create a basic version on play.rust-lang.org — Ankit3 mins ago
I have...a guess or two. But it's just as likely that they're wrong guesses. And I won't know that without trying to set up three compilation units as they vaguely describe.
My suspicion is to do with the dynamic library having a different (in-memory, not necessarily in behavior) version of the rlib? Probably something to do with differences in linking processes?
Yeah. Dynamically loading the dylib. That's it. The static is loaded by the bin and the dylib separately, probably. Not sure how reliant libloading is on the OS facilities for this, so the behavior may even change from system to system.
I could be mistaken, but I seem to remember some differences in behavior between *nix and windows w.r.t. static libraries linked by dynamic ones. I know I'm not familiar enough with the minutiae to point at where though.
I'd guess the OP is used to more-managed languages, though, to not expect this behavior (or simple link setups).
Waiting to see if anyone sees the thing that really drives me up the wall
user6564029
actually this reminds me an old joke about a word with three letters being misspelled in four places. this thing has no name. anything else I'm missing?
I'm looking for a distributed build system for Rust that:
Is free, gratis and opensource
Is cross-platform and cross-compiles (from ARMv6, ARMv7, i386 and amd64 Linux and amd64 Windows for amd64 Linux and preferably also ARMv8 Android)
Has low impact on my network
Does what cargo build does but...
> We create a parallel enum that is composed of only references, so it's lightweight to create. It's important that we define the same variants and in the same order as the primary enum so they will hash the same.
I'm using a complex key for HashMap such that the key comprises two parts and one part is a String, and I can't figure out how to do lookups via the HashMap::get method without allocating a new String for each lookup.
Here's some code:
#[derive(Debug, Eq, Hash, PartialEq)]
struct Complex {
...
There are three Rust modules in this setup:
A rlib name crte (cargo new crte --lib)
A dylib name ext (cargo new ext --lib)
A bin directory with the main program; name main (cargo new main --bin)
In the rlib, a mutable static variable is defined and later updated based on some logic.
pub stat...