@Stargateur I don't. I've just the arrays tag followed since a few days when I noticed I could get the gold with two answers. It might not be wise. arrays question are incredibly bad...
I didn't follow much. I've just read that some people reproached Klabnik to have been a little too vocal in a kind of SJW role. As I've seen nothing personally I can't tell more
If Klabnik's foes are all stupid kids like this crypto-chad, I see no problem...
Is there a way to perform an index access to an instance of a struct like this:
struct MyStruct {
// ...
}
impl MyStruct {
// ...
}
fn main() {
let s = MyStruct::new();
s["something"] = 533; // This is what I need
}
@DenysSéguret still 29 for me tomorrow and today was announced 39 then 40 and reticently they think about 41 - - but at least we will have a lot of rain this week end
@DenysSéguret You shouldn't write " the functions to call are dynamically found which impact performances" as if it were a concern. The impact is so low that almost everybody don't care.
@FrenchBoiethios after intensive heating, yes it's OK. Still far from C but there are things nobody even tries to write in C. Java lets you write complex big systems that don't always immediately crash and where bugs have limited consequences
Java isn't slow compared to most languages, thanks to the dark magic of the VM. But we're in a Rust world here. Java can't beat the no GC, no dynamic world.
so yeah, the compiler already does the right thing
The biggest benefit I can see would be the ergonomics of being able to pass a closure accepting any argument type, but that seems a bit strange on the surface