yeah pointers are a whole 'nother thing. they're usually an escape hatch from the borrow checker
usually used in unsafe code
they're not normally used in "regular" rust code, they're more for low-level unsafe stuff. interfacing with C code. or sometimes to get around limitations of the borrow checker people will use pointers
So then is a rust reference the same as a c++ reference then? it really seems like it's not a reference at all, but something to indicate pass-by-reference and data-owned-elsewhere
If I think about what the compiler would do, I think it would likely inline it to a global static memory space, and... clone(?) it when the function returns with new ownership data?
I just want to hop in here and say that I loved reading the discussion here from afar. @JohnKugelman, you've been an amazing mentor. And @tuskiomi, you've been very receptive and attentive, especially nice to see considering the comments in your question seemed... frustrating. Glad you guys were able to talk things through.
@tuskiomi I used to use VHDL, but I'm not sure what you're referring to here. Care to elaborate briefly? I mean, even if it's not "lifetimes" per se, I'm interested in what feature you think is similar or related.