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LearnRust

wakatime

This repository is dedicated to contain code written with Cargo while self-learning coding in Rust.
All executable projects are prefixed with learn_, followed by topic number [0-9]_[0-9]_ incrementally and topic covered in the project. Please use code responsibly.


Getting Started

To run all project in this repository, make sure you already installed cargo by running the cargo --version in the terminal.

# check the version of cargo
$ cargo --version
# navigate to a specific project folder
$ cd .\learn_1_1_hello_world\
# compile
$ cargo build
# execute
$ cargo run

Special Thanks

Prof. Hussam AI-Hertani
Teacher in Electronics and Information Technology program
Heritage College, Gatineau, Quebec, Canada


Language

Rust

The Rust Programming Language: https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/title-page.html
Rust by Example: https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/
The Cargo Book: https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/index.html


todo!() Macro in Rust

fn main() {
    // Display the message "Hello, world!"
    todo!("Display the message by using the todo!() macro");
}

Classic Hello, world Program

fn main() {
    // Our main function does one task: show a message
    // println! displays the input "Hello, world!" to the screen
    println!("Hello, world!");
}

Smiley Face

// Specify the data type "char"
let character_1: char = 'S';
let character_2: char = 'f';

// Compiler interprets a single item in quotations as the "char" data type
let smiley_face = '😃';

// Compiler interprets a series of items in quotations as a "str" data type and creates a "&str" reference
let string_1 = "miley ";

// Specify the data type "str" with the reference syntax "&str"
let string_2: &str = "ace";

println!("{} is a {}{}{}{}.", smiley_face, character_1, string_1, character_2, string_2);

Commonly Used Commnads in Rust

# update rustup
$ rustup self update
# set nightly version to default for academic purpose
$ rustup default nightly
# Install Rust Language Server (RSL)
$ rustup component add rls --toolchain nightly
$ rustup component add rust-analysis --toolchain nightly
$ rustup component add rust-src --toolchain nightly
# see the basics of rustc compiler
$ rustc -h
# see the basics of cargo (package management tool)
$ cargo -h

Interesting Facts

  1. Rust manages code based on crate and mod; Think of crate as projects, each crate is a complete unit for compiling, delivering an .exe or .lib file.
    Inside each crate, mod is placed as namespaces.
  2. By default, the rustc compiler introduces dependance to the stdlib; In addition to that, the compiler automatically adds an use statement for each crate developed by the user: use std::prelude::*; for commonly used type, trait, function and macro.
    The source code of the prelude module is placed in /src/libstd/prelude/ directory.
  3. The line I type the most is #![allow(unused)]

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