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-rw-r--r--rust.html.markdown29
1 files changed, 18 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/rust.html.markdown b/rust.html.markdown
index dcb54733..dd03acdd 100644
--- a/rust.html.markdown
+++ b/rust.html.markdown
@@ -5,15 +5,22 @@ contributors:
filename: learnrust.rs
---
-Rust is an in-development programming language developed by Mozilla Research.
-It is relatively unique among systems languages in that it can assert memory
-safety *at compile time* without resorting to garbage collection. Rust’s first
-release, 0.1, occurred in January 2012, and development moves so quickly that at
-the moment the use of stable releases is discouraged, and instead one should use
-nightly builds. On January 9 2015, Rust 1.0 Alpha was released, and the rate of
-changes to the Rust compiler that break existing code has dropped significantly
-since. However, a complete guarantee of backward compatibility will not exist
-until the final 1.0 release.
+Rust is a programming language developed by Mozilla Research.
+Rust combines low-level control over performance with high-level convenience and
+safety guarantees.
+
+It achieves these goals without requiring a garbage collector or runtime, making
+it possible to use Rust libraries as a "drop-in replacement" for C.
+
+Rust’s first release, 0.1, occurred in January 2012, and for 3 years development
+moved so quickly that until recently the use of stable releases was discouraged
+and instead the general advise was to use nightly builds.
+
+On May 15th 2015, Rust 1.0 was released with a complete guarantee of backward
+compatibility. Improvements to compile times and other aspects of the compiler are
+currently available in the nightly builds. Rust has adopted a train-based release
+model with regular releases every six weeks. Rust 1.1 beta was made available at
+the same time of the release of Rust 1.0.
Although Rust is a relatively low-level language, Rust has some functional
concepts that are generally found in higher-level languages. This makes
@@ -77,7 +84,7 @@ fn main() {
// This is basically an immutable pointer to a string – it doesn’t
// actually contain the contents of a string, just a pointer to
// something that does (in this case, `s`)
- let s_slice: &str = &*s;
+ let s_slice: &str = &s;
println!("{} {}", s, s_slice); // hello world hello world
@@ -92,7 +99,7 @@ fn main() {
// A slice – an immutable view into a vector or array
// This is much like a string slice, but for vectors
- let slice: &[i32] = &*vector;
+ let slice: &[i32] = &vector;
// Use `{:?}` to print something debug-style
println!("{:?} {:?}", vector, slice); // [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]