@EnnMichael There are many kinds of tyrannic rulers. Such a concept could be very convenient to a parent (trust me, it's not so easy to teach kids), or just enlightened leaders really wanting people to stop eating some meat which is dangerous on hot climates, to stop bringing at their mouth the hand they used to wipe their ass in a country with scarce water, etc.
my garage is not heated or cooled but it seems tools dont rust there as much as in my free standing shed. why is that.
can i simply cover outdoor metal items with a tarp to inhibit large % of rust by not allowing moisture to settle on them at night?
Given that to_string() and to_owned() now have the same performance characteristics for str, both calling .to_owned(), if I'm not mistaken, is there one that you prefer?
In fact you often have hints from the surroundings. Sometimes the intent is clearly just to make it owned, some times there are other conversions with string building
@EnnMichael For deref-coerced values, x.into() could be calling an impl of Into for the Deref::Target of x. But adding an impl of Into directly for the type of x can change the behavior of the program.
"The Rc::clone(&from) syntax is the most idiomatic because it conveys more explicitly the meaning of the code. [...] this syntax makes it easier to see that this code is creating a new reference rather than copying the whole content of foo."
@Jason In general to_string is more explicit than to_owned. But it depends on the context: if the context requires something to be ToOwned or Into<X>, From<X> or whatever other options are out there, then I use those, because in that context, that's more explicit. But if there's no special requirement in the context, then I prefer the to_string. I think the rule is as simple as whatever is more descriptive and more self-explanatory if there are multiple choices available.
@E_net4thecircusstopper Oh, I hadn't read that, but I like that a lot! It somewhat bothered me in it giving the illusion of possibly being an expensive clone.
@PeterVaro well, there didn't explicitly, there say he have break a rule, I think they should not have talk about it like this, they should have say "A mistake we made by not validating our intern work"
@Stargateur That's what I was referring to, yes. Such a silly mistake (and likely many, many others) are not the fault of the intern. It CANNOT BE their fault by definition. They are only interns and need to be supervised. The same for apprentice, junior, medior, senior, etc. level things. If someone fucked up something, their managers have to take the blame.
In most industries there are audited practices, and rules you must follow (see ISO9000 for example). Not following these rules is enough to be a breach of contract. But I guess when you work on defense and security for the US government quality and liability don't matter
Every ten years I change the server and that's all, the bills are constant, I don't care about anything. And one server is enough to run a lot of things
@Stargateur I've tried to clarify your addition to the install faq of broot. Can you please check I didn't misunderstood ? dystroy.org/broot/common-problems/…
@DenysSéguret yes, only thing is I give a full example that include the "fr-fr" at the end but that not really important and since you remove the full output, you could have only write "System.Text.UTF8Encoding"