Rust

In Rust we trust! Rust is a systems programming language focus...
Jun 27, 2018 20:45
@Shepmaster thanks for the edit. loose vs lose is an old nemesis of mine :)
May 30, 2018 10:58
(but maybe you have to buy the book first, which would suck :p)
May 30, 2018 10:58
@shepmaster yes, for instance... I would count that as sort of a downvote
May 30, 2018 10:56
@Shepmaster actually, you can downvote books ;)
May 18, 2018 16:24
Might so better for english, though. Maybe i should bother:)
May 18, 2018 16:23
I do, but it does not even work properly for my native language...
May 18, 2018 15:41
Nur at least I can tell first hand that the former is much more komfortable die Development.
May 18, 2018 15:39
At home I use Linux too. At work I can't :(
May 18, 2018 15:38
Anyway, thx OP's Solution kind of confirms both our points, doesn't it? :)
May 18, 2018 15:31
Mobile Auto Correction is totally useless :(
May 18, 2018 15:30
Use Linux, that is.
May 18, 2018 15:30
But i agree, if you have both, die Linux
May 18, 2018 15:28
And telling someone to learn Another OS so they can try a new programming language... well... no :p
May 18, 2018 15:26
@Boiethios I find GNU toolchains is easier to set up and use than Microsoft's. Even on Windows.
May 9, 2018 10:22
heck, I might just do it; if I find a way to phrase it usefully, that is.
May 9, 2018 10:22
Asking a marginally useful question to which I more or less know the answer, just to get some points...
May 9, 2018 10:21
@LukasKalbertodt Thanks for the link.
May 9, 2018 09:19
feels like cheating :)
May 9, 2018 09:04
Different question: how come the Shr trait, which is used to overload the >> operator is implemented for primitives using the >> operator? (source)
May 9, 2018 08:43
no, i say it's a bitwise operator because semantically it works on the bits of the input
May 9, 2018 08:42
hehe.. that's starting to get philosophical... can a definition be "right"?
May 9, 2018 08:40
in that case i'm not sure if your definition of bitwise agrees with the common definition :)
May 9, 2018 08:37
hmm.. what is a bit wise operator then?
May 9, 2018 08:36
>> with u32 uses SHL but >> with i32 uses SAR
May 9, 2018 08:36
SAR is special - it is the sign-extended version of SHL
May 9, 2018 08:35
May 9, 2018 08:35
wrong link
May 9, 2018 08:35
oh, sorry
May 9, 2018 08:34
@Stargateur godbolt.org
May 8, 2018 14:25
@E_net4 only if they are told how to make it compile :p
May 7, 2018 19:23
so i'd say your spurring is bearing fruit
May 7, 2018 19:23
also from other users
May 7, 2018 19:23
but it seems to me in [rust] there is more (and more constructive) editing going on than in [python]
May 7, 2018 19:22
@Shepmaster i don't feel confident in english enough to edit more than the most obvious formatting/grammar/typo mistakes ;)
May 7, 2018 19:18
but it's also a matter of taste to some extent
May 7, 2018 19:18
Right, code formatting and paragraphs can make all the difference
May 7, 2018 19:17
@Shepmaster nope. I can testify that :)
May 7, 2018 19:11
@Shepmaster I have to admit, I sometimes catch myself paying less attention to details when posting in [rust] because I know it's going to be edited...
May 7, 2018 19:06
Seems like a good answer - you didn't even have to edit @Shepmaster :)
May 7, 2018 12:32
It would be nice if the system allowed a gold user to choose between vote and hammer.
May 7, 2018 12:22
sometimes people get funny ideas
May 7, 2018 12:20
ah, it's flaw.. sorry I was confused
May 7, 2018 12:19
flow?
May 7, 2018 12:10
This sounds like it could be very interesting for @Shepmaster indeed
May 7, 2018 12:09
As with @deceze, I'm puzzled by the message. We're trying to get a discussion going but I'm still waiting for the mod who sent you that message to come back online. — BoltClock ♦ 1 min ago
May 2, 2018 15:01
The double-ended solution is neat
May 2, 2018 15:01
@Shepmaster looks like virtually everyone is doing Project Euler in Rust :)
May 2, 2018 12:50
@Boiethios i totally agree.
May 2, 2018 12:47
@piercebot Nice, Project Euler is also how I started rust. May I challenge you to come up with a palindrome check that does not require allocation (collect creates a new String on the heap)? :) — kazemakase 3 mins ago
May 2, 2018 12:47
Note that you do not need to allocate a String, you can compare the iterators: .filter(|x| x.chars().eq(x.chars().rev())). — Boiethios 3 mins ago