Simple features are often complex to make, and complex features are often way too simple to make.
Ogeon
I assumed the handles are for chairs that are overly heavy and hard to grip.
That's nice to hear! And the Ok*
color spaces are indeed quite neat
ICC profiles are definitely part of the field, but that's sort of a topic of its own. At least in terms of scope. The color space rabbit hole is so deep that I never got as far as including them. There are other crates that go into those parts and it should be easy to bridge between them and Palette.
I would say Palette is more for the "business logic" of working with colors, so converting, manipulating and analyzing. The difference from ICC profiles when converting with Palette is that you need to know more about the source and destination color spaces during compile time. ICC profiles use more runtime information.
Palette could be used for applications like image manipulation programs, 3D rendering, generative art, UI color theme generation, computer vision, and a lot more. A lot of people also use it for smaller tasks like converting HSL input to RGB output or making gradients.
Förutom att välja de som verkar mest intressanta (finska vinterkriget är en bra klassiker) skulle jag också säga att man kan börja med de senaste och gå bakåt. De har en del repriser med bättre ljudkvalitet som man lätt missar annars. Enstaka serier är de enda man kan behöva se till att man börjar i rätt ände av, men de är tydligt numrerade eller ihopklippta.
It's useful for keeping track of your mental gymnastics.
I don't know, something about seeing the same diarrhea pills ad over and over doesn't exactly spark joy for me.
It may be possible to use the Any
trait to "launder" the value by first casting it to &Any
and then downcasting it to the generic type.
let any_value = match tmp_value {
serde_json::Value::Number(x) => x as &Any,
// ...
};
let maybe_value = any_value.downcast_ref::< T >();
I haven't tested it, so I may have missed something.
Edit: to be clear, this will not actually let you return multiple types, but let the caller decide which type to expect. I assumed this was your goal.
Utf-8 is still Unicode and supports the same set of characters. Just encoded differently, with a variable amount of bytes per character. So, it should work, unless the software writing the file doesn't support it properly.
I prefer standing on lettuce.
My shower has its own favorite temperature and will slowly readjust itself to it.
Ah, taking inspiration from late 1940's literature, I see. Smart!