The Rust Performance Book First published in November 2020 Written by Nicholas Nethercote and others Source code
Rust Language Cheat Sheet 2. May 2024 Contains clickable links to The Book BK, Rust by Example EX, Std Docs STD, Nomicon NOM, Reference REF. Clickable symbols BK The Book. EX Rust by Example. STD Standard Library (API). NOM Nomicon. REF Reference. RFC Official RFC documents. 🔗 The internet. ↑ On this page, above. ↓ On this page, below. Other symbols 🗑️ Largely deprecated. '18 Has minimum edition
A pragmatic new design for high-level abstractions Monads (and, more generally, constructs known as “higher kinded types”) are a tool for high-level abstraction in programming languages1. Historically, there has been a lot of debate inside (and outside) the Rust community about whether monads would be a useful abstraction to have in the language. I’m not concerned with that here. You see, there’s
A language empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software. Performance Rust is blazingly fast and memory-efficient: with no runtime or garbage collector, it can power performance-critical services, run on embedded devices, and easily integrate with other languages. Reliability Rust’s rich type system and ownership model guarantee memory-safety and thread-safety — enabling you to elim
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