I have the following code-snippets (don't question the sense of them ;) )
1. get the n-th element of a Vec recursively
fn helper<T: Clone>(n: usize, current_n: usize, current_xs: &Vec<T>, accumulator: Option<T>) -> Option<T> {
if current_n > n {
accumulator
} else {
let ...
and sometimes, it's at the bottom of a previous issue...
But seriously, this is a serious shortcoming of cargo. Users should not have to guess themselves that the compilation bug is related to their rustc being two months old
But many developers on linux just have the reflex to compile from source and don't really know rust. It would be good to look welcoming to here with a toolchain explaining them the problem (which is already the case for most of rust)
on an unrelated note, would you choose a LinkedList if insertion and removal of elements at random places happening very, very often, you don't care about the order, but you want to have duplicates to be stored and you will only want to iterate over the elements never want to access them directly at a specific location?
(the reason I'm asking, because I would by default choose a Vec but this specific scenario is the exact one where a LinkedList makes a lot of sense actually..)
using a good size for you vector you could have all pro of vector without inconvenient to move 1000000000000 element, imagine you have 10 vector, this mean when you change 1 elem of vector 4 you just have to change vector 4. With some code to "equilibrate" the size of your inner vector when it become too big, this is a very good way to fill your requirement "you will only want to iterate over the elements never want to access them directly at a specific location"
ofc all this pain come from "if insertion and removal of elements at random places happening very, very often"
right, so the idea is this: I store Rcs as elements -- and from time to time I have to iterate over the elements and if an element has exactly one owner, I remove it from the container
@trentcl I'm aware of that, I still don't understand your reasoning -- which may not be even important as I don't think mutable iteration is a thing with LLs
@Stargateur Me neither to be fair, but I wanted to say that those different ways of declaring a float are not actually 3 different ways of declaring a float
The question about all the ways to declare a float is actually quite popular, should we also make a question about all the ways to ignore the borrow checker?
What I really meant was "should we also make a question about all the stupid ways to ignore the borrow checker?", but maybe we actually should make such a Q&A with serious As
@Stargateur I honestly don't understand why people didn't start using Swatch Internet Time in the nineties! I was using it with my friends and we all loved it :)
it was global, it was 10-based, it was fun -- it was cool.
My only defense of imperial: 1. Fahrenheit has nice range and granularity for what humans tend to live in. 2: one foot being 12 inches is nice to divide into smaller pieces easily (1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/6)
I'm not sure how you say better for my case. My point is that 0F -> 100F is more-or-less temperatures that humans thrive in. That's a nice range, compared to (roughly) -10C -> 30C
my recollection on this one is quite hazy, dynamically sized static arrays were introduced to C99 (maybe C11) because someone implemented them as an extension to GCC or was it the other way around?
I can't stand my current job. I'm porting some cryptic VB models to java and it's only the part of the hell I can describe. I need a remote rust job ASAP.