well, using a tupple just to discard the useless value looks like kind of a hack. I don't think the use case I mention, which is setting the value then using it, is rare.
@Stargateur I'm always torn on this in general. I like to both write code such that works on as many versions of Rust as possible but also like using new features.
the stdlib is nice because you know that it's always going to be compiled with one specific version of rustc at least
I find abbreviations like val to be an awkward middle ground between "this is what this thing is" and "I have to give this thing a name, but it doesn't really matter what"
@trentcl I first followed the practice of the code (which was the single letter v). Then val as was suggested by jnl (and which is better). Had I chosen myself, I would have used value (which I usually use) but as a newcomer I prefer to follow the customs of the place...
Another awkward shortening is the iterator's rev. Everybody can read and write reverse, there was no point making it rev, it's not like if you used it every 20 lines
@trentcl Yes. I configured the linters at work (100 or 120 depending on the languages). I don't like these hard limits but without them some horrible code appear
.. I just wrote a 68 line function (in C#). And that's already making a helper type and outlining a helper function. I could maybe golf away a few lines? but I don't see how to get this down to 25.
Oh, I'm not saying I agree with making 25 line functions. Exactly the opposite. I think have have over-100-line functions. If there isn't a good way to separate the control flow, then there isn't