I’m somewhat surprised by the number of people using RLS and not rust-analyzer, while being aware of the latter. Every once in a while I see people experiencing issues with the former.
I get that undefined behaviour can cause anything to happen and I get how all the other scenarios you've linked to can lead to undefined behaviour, but I guess more my question is what's the danger here and what's going on in this scenario? So a reference is made to somewhere unknown in memory and then what's possibly going on behind the scenes to potentially cause issues? — David Sherret9 hours ago
BUT
a tips from me: everything before a but can be ignored
On a totally unrelated note, the following qoute finds me every now and then for the last 10 years, but every time it makes me smile for some readon:
> Bob: So, how do I query the database? Ed: It's not a database. It's a key-value store! Bob: Ok, it's not a database. How do I query it? Ed: You write a distributed map reduce function in Erlang! Bob: Did you just tell me to go fuck myself? Ed: I believe I did, Bob.
I never had any problem with the term NoSQL, in my mind I immediately turn that into non-relational-database. Is it a meaningful or even useful term? Not particularly, but that's the least of my annoyances. I believe the main problem is how it became trendy and popular, used in situations where relational databases would not just outperform them, but would lead to less, more robust, more elegant, and safer code.
But I guess that's what being trendy and fashionable is all about: you leave your common sense behind, and follow the herd!