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12:15 AM
@trentcl looks like a meaty one for you stackoverflow.com/questions/64110587/…
 
 
2 hours later…
2:23 AM
The answer to this question is to split the array into 9 different pieces? This is the most unreasonable solution I've ever heard of. — puritii 12 mins ago
the most
 
 
7 hours later…
9:20 AM
People can't scroll half a page, eh
 
9:32 AM
@Shepmaster sounds like a challenge
 
 
1 hour later…
10:41 AM
Yeah sure, keep answering dupes. :[
 
 
2 hours later…
 
2 hours later…
2:39 PM
[cv-plz] stackoverflow.com/q/64121582/155423 — typo by not following the docs.
 
3:26 PM
I feel like making a poll: log, slog, tracing, or other (which)?
 
3:36 PM
tracing.
 
 
2 hours later…
@E_net4changesdisplayname a large portion of "cause it's the new shiny"
but also because I like how you can add bits of context and they all end up aggregated in a message
It's kind of like inverse SNAFU
 
6:10 PM
It's also got the benefit of "natively" meshing well with async code
What I really want to do is add it to the playground
and set it up to capture things like "build, 2015, success" and then log that somewhere
 
 
1 hour later…
8:04 PM
So, is tarpaulin still what the cool kids use for coverage, or am I missing the shiny?
 
Coverage is for suckers
(I don't use it so I can't actually answer)
 
@Shepmaster That's an odd thing for a Kirby to say.
 
heh
 
8:38 PM
@E_net4changesdisplayname I've briefly used tarpaulin, combined with Github Actions and Codecov.io
Not sure if there's anything new? I think the only alternatives are grcov and kcov, no?
 
That I know of, yes.
But TBH I never got deep into doing code coverage in Rust, perhaps because tarpaulin was still a bit too fresh when I saw it.
 
Yes, I came across some old reddit posts that didn't speak highly of it, but they were from years ago. I think people mentioned those issues were fixed in later releases. I didn't have any major issues with it for what it's worth.
 
That is good to know!
 
If I recall correctly, it does only run on Linux, but assuming one runs it on a server that might not be an issue.
 
Read that. Good thing x86_64 linux is my default personal dev environment.
(alas, can't say the same about my work dev environment)
 
8:50 PM
@E_net4changesdisplayname work is for suckers
 
@Shepmaster i am trigger
 
@E_net4changesdisplayname cry into your fat stacks of cash
 
Anyways, tarpaulin worked the first try on DICOM-rs. The code coverage... could be better.
@Shepmaster Jokes on you, 40% goes to the rent
 
@E_net4changesdisplayname as in the tool is bad or your tests are bad
 
Hold on, doing it again just for the library crates.
Hmm, odd how it still tries to pull the dictionary builder into coverage.
 
 
2 hours later…
11:13 PM
posted on September 29, 2020 by Jubilee and Lokathor

We're announcing the start of the Portable SIMD Project Group within the Libs team. This group is dedicated to making a portable SIMD API available to stable Rust users. The Portable SIMD Project Group is lead by @calebzulawski, @Lokathor, and @workingjubilee. What are project groups? Rust uses project groups to help coordinate work. They're a place for people to get involved in helping shap

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