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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.
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Loops
There are three looping keywords in Rust: while
, loop
, and for
:
while
The
while
keyword
works much like in other languages, executing the loop body as long as the
condition is true.
fn main() {
let mut x = 200;
while x >= 10 {
x = x / 2;
}
println!("Final x: {x}");
}
for
The for
loop iterates over
ranges of values:
fn main() {
for x in 1..5 {
println!("x: {x}");
}
}
loop
The loop
statement just
loops forever, until a break
.
fn main() {
let mut i = 0;
loop {
i += 1;
println!("{i}");
if i > 100 {
break;
}
}
}
- We will discuss iteration later; for now, just stick to range expressions.
- Note that the
for
loop only iterates to4
. Show the1..=5
syntax for an inclusive range.