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Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Bjørn Jørgensen
3beda3678b Update link to macros in the book (#2719)
Do not link to an unstable chapter number but to the rust book as a whole
2025-04-23 11:11:53 +02:00
Jonathan Daniel
1c964f6fe3 Fix a broken link and check internal links (#2195)
In #2153 I aimed to fix a link but broke it.
In this PR, I fix it and add
[`mdbook-linkcheck`](https://github.com/Michael-F-Bryan/mdbook-linkcheck)
to avoid future cases.

Some past fixes that could have been prevented, in addition to mine in
this PR:
* #811
* #2064
* #2146

Note:  
`mdbook-linkcheck` may also check external links with a configuration
change.
It can be beneficial to check also external links from time to time. I
ran it here and found 3 broken links.

Maintainers - sorry for the lack of a preceding issue. We can discuss it
here.
Some remaining work is to fix the outdated internal links in the
translations, not done here.
Let me know what you think about the proposed contribution.

This PR completes #1502.
2024-07-22 11:37:19 +00:00
Henri F
2641370f34 Update index.md with language selection instructions and translations link (#2131) 2024-06-25 09:45:04 -04:00
Max Heller
3e7ce5e6ee Link to PDF version of course from first page (#1836)
Re
https://github.com/google/comprehensive-rust/pull/1805#pullrequestreview-1888804528

---------

Co-authored-by: Martin Geisler <martin@geisler.net>
2024-02-26 13:24:28 +01:00
Martin Geisler
c9f66fd425 Format all Markdown files with dprint (#1157)
This is the result of running `dprint fmt` after removing `src/` from
the list of excluded directories.

This also reformats the Rust code: we might want to tweak this a bit in
the future since some of the changes removes the hand-formatting. Of
course, this formatting can be seen as a mis-feature, so maybe this is
good overall.

Thanks to mdbook-i18n-helpers 0.2, the POT file is nearly unchanged
after this, meaning that all existing translations remain valid! A few
messages were changed because of stray whitespace characters:

     msgid ""
     "Slices always borrow from another object. In this example, `a` has to remain "
    -"'alive' (in scope) for at least as long as our slice. "
    +"'alive' (in scope) for at least as long as our slice."
     msgstr ""

The formatting is enforced in CI and we will have to see how annoying
this is in practice for the many contributors. If it becomes annoying,
we should look into fixing dprint/check#11 so that `dprint` can annotate
the lines that need fixing directly, then I think we can consider more
strict formatting checks.

I added more customization to `rustfmt.toml`. This is to better emulate
the dense style used in the course:

- `max_width = 85` allows lines to take up the full width available in
our code blocks (when taking margins and the line numbers into account).
- `wrap_comments = true` ensures that we don't show very long comments
in the code examples. I edited some comments to shorten them and avoid
unnecessary line breaks — please trim other unnecessarily long comments
when you see them! Remember we're writing code for slides 😄
- `use_small_heuristics = "Max"` allows for things like struct literals
and if-statements to take up the full line width configured above.

The formatting settings apply to all our Rust code right now — I think
we could improve this with https://github.com/dprint/dprint/issues/711
which lets us add per-directory `dprint` configuration files. However,
the `inherit: true` setting is not yet implemented (as far as I can
tell), so a nested configuration file will have to copy most or all of
the top-level file.
2023-12-31 00:15:07 +01:00
Dustin J. Mitchell
6d19292f16 Comprehensive Rust v2 (#1073)
I've taken some work by @fw-immunant and others on the new organization
of the course and condensed it into a form amenable to a text editor and
some computational analysis. You can see the inputs in `course.py` but
the interesting bits are the output: `outline.md` and `slides.md`.

The idea is to break the course into more, smaller segments with
exercises at the ends and breaks in between. So `outline.md` lists the
segments, their duration, and sums those durations up per-day. It shows
we're about an hour too long right now! There are more details of the
segments in `slides.md`, or you can see mostly the same stuff in
`course.py`.

This now contains all of the content from the v1 course, ensuring both
that we've covered everything and that we'll have somewhere to redirect
every page.

Fixes #1082.
Fixes #1465.

---------

Co-authored-by: Nicole LeGare <dlegare.1001@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Geisler <mgeisler@google.com>
2023-11-29 16:39:24 +01:00
Adrian Taylor
7f469fb2c7 Add Chromium section (#1479)
This is a contribution of a Chromium section for Comprehensive Rust.

---------

Co-authored-by: Nicole L <dlegare.1001@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Geisler <martin@geisler.net>
2023-11-27 18:21:19 +00:00
Martin Geisler
45133b26a6 Add a link back to the canonical home (#1141)
This is a follow-up to #1140 to further ensure that people can find the
canonical home for the course.
2023-08-31 09:46:22 +02:00
Martin Geisler
8d9fddd92f Rename welcome.md to index.md (#1039)
When building the book, mdBook will always generate an `index.html`
page for first page of the book. This meant that we had the same
content available under two different names:

- `welcome.html`: this is what the TOC would link to, and
- `index.html` or simply `/`: this is what search engines link to

Renaming the page and setting up a redirect should fix this confusion.
We still don’t have a good way of avoiding links to the `index.html`
page, but this should fix the first half of the problem.

I tested this for translations as well by building the output in a
subdirectory and serving the parent directory.

Part of #847.
2023-07-28 17:27:31 +02:00