@Unbreachable Once you get into Rust, you will probably like it better than C at some point ;-)
Are you looking for a Rust project currently?
@Unbreachable I always try to recommend writing a Gameboy emulator to anyone interested in learning how hardware really works. The original Gameboy is still simple enough to write an emulator alone in a reasonable amount of time.
And well, many people I know played the Gameboy as a child (and some still do ^_^). So it's just an awesome feeling to write a software that can read a game ROM (which seems just like super crazy binary stuff) and suddenly your OpenGL window shows your game. :o
Do not underestimate the gameboy emulator tho. It requires quite some reading and eat least a couple of full days work to make just the logo scroll in. I personally never figured out sound :/
Other than that, I don't currently have ideas. If you want to contribute to other projects, keeep and eye out for "call for participation" in this-week-in-rust.
I'm rolling my own entity component system.
Is there a way of mapping struct types to integers?
I could implement a toInt() for each struct, but it feels inelegant to execute code to get a number which could be known at compile-time.
I'm rather not take care of the numbering myself (it doesn't...
I'm of two minds on this. I'm not sad to see Actix go; I never used it, didn't mesh well with the maintainers personality, and the continued apparent misuse of unsafe.
Whether you liked Actix or not (I personally haven't used it nor I have any attachments to it) we are still a young and rapidly growing/changing community and from that perspective if a big project (and one cannot deny Actix was big and well known) has some problems then it will ruin the reputation of the community if the author of such project says the community is horrible around the language..
I thought Nikolay previously stepped down from maintaining actix, for someone else to take over. What happened to that? He just didn't think anyone else was capable?
Slightly off, but I don't understand why people care about Reddit.. it is THE most horrible platform out there, the community in most groups is poisonous and toxicating, and UI/UX of the site is subpar -- not a good experience from start to finish.. so why bother exactly?
@PeterHall that maybe the case, I started following it a few months ago and for me it became so boring and repetitious very quickly I lost interest.. but I did not contribute, nor I really cared about comments on threads..
(maybe the problem is with me, people tried to convince me for almost a decade now that Reddit is a good thing.. I fail to see how it is -- but I guess the problem could be me :))
@PeterVaro I agree, but from the other direction. If we are young and say "hey, we are a safe language", then the poster child web framework isn't safe, we lose credibility there
@Shepmaster but on this one there was no choice issue on actix was deleted
> Without even looking at the actual issue, the fact that the ticket was deleted is worrying. Closing a ticket as "Won't Fix" or leaving it open in case someone will want to fix it in the future are options - there is no need to pretend the bug described in the ticket never existed. That doesn't help anybody.
Anyone with enough rights on a repo can delete a ticket, a comment, or edit anything posted by others (although I think there is a history of edits now?)
@mcarton correct. I have a coworker who was particularly livid about this. At a previous job they (playfully) edited his comment to say something he wouldn't say.
@mcarton That is probably my fault. I posted a link to it, just a couple of minutes after he posted it - and I linked to a revision, in case he deleted it etc. And now I think it's my (old) link that is being shared.
public issue -> fix it -> close it. memory unsafely are very if not impossible to exploit specially in Rust, also you need to inform people that use the crate that it has a fail you can't not tell them. You can hide detail but you can't hide the problem.
@Stargateur I wouldn't remove a GH ticket for that: all the watchers of the repository already received an email, and external websites might have cached it as seen with that Reddit post, so it's public information as soon as someone opened the ticket
@Shepmaster We would still need Rust for a cleaner language, with better tooling support (cargo, rustdoc), and a saner std library. Safety isn't the only good reason to use Rust.
I'm trying to implement a database in Rust that can store arbitrary nested HashMaps. The Database should be shared so I need to work with Mutex and Arcs. I can read things from the Database, but I have problems inserting stuff in this Database because i get the error:
error: cannot borrow `*bran...
> error: reached the type-length limit while instantiating `std::pin::Pin::<&mut std::future...}[1]::poll[0]::{{closure}}[0])]>` | = note: consider adding a `#![type_length_limit="1172223"]` attribute to your crate