I made a function to check all of the row's fields before parsing them into a struct:
pub fn check_result_field<'a>(row: &Vec<postgres::Row>) -> ErrorObject {
for r in row {
for i in 0..row.len() {
match r.try_get(i) {
Ok(result) => {
r...
Aye. I couldn't find a tool to track down all (direct + indirect) dependents.
They are all most likely conditional dependencies based on the target platform, but it still might give us an idea of how brittle Windows support could become in the future.
No worries, we're here to take the trash out help. ;)
@NebulaFox In that latest Q, it might help to have a look at how HashMap declares the method contains_key. Also, this one contains a few more resources on coercion in Rust.
One common trick is to preppend a & to induce deref coercion. E.g. if name is a String and fn foo(bar: &str), then you can do foo(&name), since `name is coerced to a string slice.
That should fix at least one of the error messages.
Interesting. And then &&"c" twice to make one of the options work
Just remembered: The reason following the type of contains_key would not work is due std::borrow::Borrow<std::str::String> not being implemented... or something like that
Hang on
the trait 'std::borrow::Borrow<&std::string::String>' is not implemented for '&str'
Does anyone knows how paths handle those weird invalid characters on Windows? Eg., what happens if I try use PathBuf::from("??")? The fact that it's just the From trait would indicate that you can just create such invalid paths, which is a shame, but is there anything special to know about that? Is there a path_my_path function somewhere?
@mcarton It will let you create the path value, but you won't be able to create a file or directory with it. I'm not sure if this answers your question.
That's not false. The fearless concurrency, the lack of stupid null pointer exceptions are the main selling points. But the real reason we love to code in rust is the whole set of niceties
i couldn't even finish it, it needs a lot of patience ^^
Maybe i'll try some other time, not sure i am able to comment against the code but it looks really clean to me, just one thing i've noticed whole project has just one trait. But abstraction doesn't needed at all i guess?
@ÖmerErden Do you have suggestions of more traits (without more dyn switch) ? You know I'm not yet a professional Rust coder, I don't have all the idiomatic reflexes
After ten years of working from home in Easy. I just switched to Divinity level, with the kids crying and biting themselves and sick and... I have no brain anymore...
I'm rushing the plan and architecture of a new web application in rust/wasm... and it must be sane and handle massive amounts of data and nodes to control plants for months... This needs more brain that what I've left but I must do it
I managed to write a first prototype of a rust/wasm application today, covering some core problems, so I hope to have the plan soon enough if I manage to work