Whenever I encounter an interesting Rust programming technique, I add it to this blog post. I’ve amassed a bit of a collection. Hopefully someone finds it interesting and useful!

  • @calcopiritus
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    21 year ago

    In tip #3 I don’t see any benefit of doing impl AsRef<[T]> over &[T]

    • Justin Ossevoort
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      11 year ago

      @calcopiritus @hatchet That way you can pass a reference or anything that can be turned into a reference as an argument. So the caller can supply a &T, Box, Rc, Arc, … (I dont’t know if there is a blanket impl so that even T itself will work.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        11 year ago

        Well, actually I would tend to agree that &[T] is preferable to AsRef in most cases; all of the smart pointers you mentioned can also easily be turned into plain references. I probably could have chosen a better example.

  • @pgsuper
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    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Nice job! I’d add that the target of the Rustdoc link shortcuts can be customized, in case they are not autodetected or point to an undesired location, like so:

    /// Use a [Tool]
    ///
    /// [Tool]: lib::types::Tool
    

    That will make the word Tool point to that type (note that the namespaces there - in lib::types::Tool - are relative to the current module / context, so you can use an imported name directly there too, for example).