this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
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Learning Rust and Lemmy
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A collaborative space for people to work together on learning Rust, learning about the Lemmy code base, discussing whatever confusions or difficulties we're having in these endeavours, and solving problems, including, hopefully, some contributions back to the Lemmy code base.
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- Lemmy.ml rule 2 applies strongly: "Be respectful, even when disagreeing. Everyone should feel welcome" (see Dessalines's post). This is a constructive space.
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Relevant links and Related Communities
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- General Lemmy Discussion Community
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- Rust Community on lemmy.ml
- Rust Community on programming.dev
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I would say make good use of the crates available. As said above, Rust as a language allows for very powerful abstractions. The language itself is quite low level, if you didn't have any other code to use. But the standard library alone gives you a lot of tools. Add to that a host of practical crates that raise the abstraction level and you've got a very high-level experience.
I can't not share this meme btw. It's obviously a joke but every joke has a bit of truth:
For instance, you've got
anyhow
that allows for a bit of "quick and dirty" error handling via the?
operator. It's useful for cases where you don't care too much about what error happens, just that it happens. And when you get an error, you get a nice explanation of what happened (no 100 line exception stack trace with 1 needle in the haystack that maybe tells you what went wrong).There's also
serde
(by the same author even) that allows for very easy serialization and deserialization, for instance into JSON or other formats.You could take a look at lib.rs to find more crates within a lot of different areas. It's a bit more categorized and better sorted than crates.io. Learning the ecosystem of crates and what's good for what is kind of a secondary thing to learn for Rust (or any language with a package ecosystem really) and it will take some trial and error probably.
No, unless you seriously need it and you definitely know what you're doing, you don't need it and you shouldn't need it. If you're reading stuff on this community, you don't need unsafe. I've worked with Rust for many years and I've still only used unsafe in the areas where it's really needed, like FFI (calling into C or C++ code). Perhaps with embedded programming you need it more, but most people don't do much embedded.
You should definitely learn about
Arc
(Atomic Reference Counted pointer) andMutex
(mutual exclusion lock) - I believe the book has a chapter or something about them. They provide one way to achieve "shared" ownership across different threads and you'll probably have lots of headaches if you don't know about them.There's some I mentioned above and for most major use cases, there are crates. Like axum for web servers as I mentioned above. Look at lib.rs I would say. It really depends on what specifically you want to do though.
Thanks!
And great little meme there!