I'm using rusqlite and getting this error InvalidColumnType and it makes me confused because the type is Integer and the target is String. Wouldn't Rust be able to convert an Integer to a String?
... I think I am about to do something that's either elegant or utter crap and I really can't decide on which. I can catch the exception and convert manually based on the error itself InvalidColumnType(0, "id", Integer).
@AntoninGAVREL Cool. So I think the question can be explained as "on a scale of 1 to 10, how much do you like seeing code that uses try catch to control the flow of execution?"
(sometimes the field you are looking for does not exist, you want to keep scrapping)
The Python Error Steamroller FuckIt.py uses state-of-the-art technology to make sure your Python code runs whether it has any right to or not. Some code has an error? Fuck it.
So after having used an Err() to manage the flow of execution for the second time, I wonder if Rust is not, in a way, encouraging the use of the error types as flow control helpers. Of the different solutions I was seeing, it's been a few times that the simplest and less expensive solution (expensive in terms of difficulty to reason about and implement) has been to use the "try catch" as flow control.
An tbh, while I think I've generally think that such was Not The Way™, I can't help but try to look at it fairly, and it appear like an actually suitable solution, that is not the worse out there.
So, it feels like in a way, Rust's type system as well as the obligation to manage results kindly pushes me in the direction of acting on the Error types.
If I have an optional method that has to be called many many times what is better if I want to skip it: have an empty body and call it or check the bool/Option before calling it?
The following benchmark make no sense. It gave zeroes.
#![feature(test)]
extern crate test;
trait OptTrait: 'static ...
@DenysSéguret hmm, I'll try to rephrase; It feels to me that by design, Rust is more tolerant (and possibly appreciative) of the various try-catch shenanigans that are sometimes frowned upon by users of other languages I've worked with.
... I think I am about to do something that's either elegant or utter crap and I really can't decide on which. I can catch the exception and convert manually based on the error itself InvalidColumnType(0, "id", Integer).
after this^
I was faced with either refactor in somewhat complex ways in order to have the code account for very many possibilities of the rusqlite fields, or use the information given to me by the error to change the integer into the string I wanted manually
And after doing it, I realized I didn't really feel dirty, as if while possibly unotrthodox, this was not actually a major smell
@DenysSéguret a real error. I was transforming all fields in a sqlite db into strings, and I believe that there was no helper for the library to convert automatically an integer to String
the integer to string failed conversion would block the rest, but accounting for the Integer type in the match Err arm was rather efficient
@FélixGagnon-Grenier I observe that in some "other languages" exceptions are thrown and caught by a separate mechanism than regular value return, so using them for non-exceptional control flow may incur a large performance cost
And exceptions have varying degrees of checkedness depending on the language (and the exception), which is another possible source of bugs
Results are just data, so they don't really have either of those problems
(I also note that some languages, such as Python, have absolutely no reservations about using exceptions for control flow)
@Stargateur Personally it depends how the endpoint would be used. Say it can take a query string which acts as a filter and so it will return multiple entities, in this case, plural. Say the URL path continues and it takes an ID as the next fragment, in that case I would use plural, because you select one specific thing from multiple stuff, as you would write x = xs[id]. However if the entity doesn't exist and you're about to create one then it is singular.
@FélixGagnon-Grenier Think of a PUT request: you don't have an ID or anything to filter by, and you only wish to create a single entity and the details may or may not be provided in the request body. In that case, it would be singular.
(If you could create multiple entities in one request, it would be plural of course.)
Very likely that's how I would do it. (Depends on how each of these endpoints should behave.)
When I'm thinking about these names, I'm always thinking about "function names"
If you function is supposed to return a single entity or should create a single one, then it is singular, if not, then plural
(Naturally, naming things is the hardest problem in computer science, so thinking about endpoint names in a similar fashion as one would with function names won't help much now, will it?)
Not really. Backronym is when you have an acronym first and you add a meaning to it later. Say you pick a word JASON and you say it is an acronym for July August September October November, albeit it is only your name but now you made it into an acronym ;)
Haha, yes. It reads as somewhat of a failed backronym to me. I tend to see "HATE .. OAS".
Regarding the months, that is quite funny.
Whenever I mentioned that to people, they wouldn't believe it at first. I could see them doing "July = J, August = A, …" in their heads until they'd form my name and then they'd be surprised.
Related to APIs and Rust! Has anyone used github.com/graphql-rust/juniper yet and if so, how did you like it? I was thinking about playing around with it and Actix this weekend.
I like graphql generally so I am somewhat partial, but I find it was at least as easy to set the graph endpoint in Rust as it was in javascript or php, or possibly easier.
not yet ;) I'm thinking on pushing another commit to the app-skeleton, if you're interested I can try to do it in the next days instead of 6-8 weeks :)
collaborating with someone I met on the internet by sharing code that makes me passionate while being on a topic that seems to interest them is the best thing that's happen to me in the last three months, no worries about me feeling rushed :P
(please no commentary on what that means for my life ;)
The main reason I started Rust, despite being a beautiful language, was the ability to be used as a backend for flutter, so I need to find a solution to make it works, and if possible without throwing my money at Apple
I agree that Apple has become really evil in the past decade
I think without the Asian market they would not be doing so well, in Asia people want Apple product to show their status
Anyway, in case Darling won't work for you (or other similar EULA-compliant solutions) running macOS on a non-Apple hardware means you're not playing by their rules.
"Another way to speed up the build is to run make with multiple jobs. For this, run make -j8 instead, where 8 is a number of current jobs to run of your choosing. In general, avoid running more jobs than twice the amount CPU cores of your machine." I should have used this from the start