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Merge pull request #1454 from ahresse/ahresse/remove_trailing_spaces
fix: remove trailing spaces
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6f84887f60
@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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# Hashmaps
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A *hash map* allows you to associate a value with a particular key.
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You may also know this by the names [*unordered map* in C++](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/container/unordered_map),
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You may also know this by the names [*unordered map* in C++](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/container/unordered_map),
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[*dictionary* in Python](https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/datastructures.html#dictionaries) or an *associative array* in other languages.
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This is the other data structure that we've been talking about before, when
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@ -3,17 +3,17 @@
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Lifetimes tell the compiler how to check whether references live long
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enough to be valid in any given situation. For example lifetimes say
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"make sure parameter 'a' lives as long as parameter 'b' so that the return
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value is valid".
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value is valid".
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They are only necessary on borrows, i.e. references,
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They are only necessary on borrows, i.e. references,
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since copied parameters or moves are owned in their scope and cannot
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be referenced outside. Lifetimes mean that calling code of e.g. functions
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can be checked to make sure their arguments are valid. Lifetimes are
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can be checked to make sure their arguments are valid. Lifetimes are
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restrictive of their callers.
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If you'd like to learn more about lifetime annotations, the
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[lifetimekata](https://tfpk.github.io/lifetimekata/) project
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has a similar style of exercises to Rustlings, but is all about
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If you'd like to learn more about lifetime annotations, the
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[lifetimekata](https://tfpk.github.io/lifetimekata/) project
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has a similar style of exercises to Rustlings, but is all about
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learning to write lifetime annotations.
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## Further information
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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Rust's macro system is very powerful, but also kind of difficult to wrap your
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head around. We're not going to teach you how to write your own fully-featured
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macros. Instead, we'll show you how to use and create them.
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If you'd like to learn more about writing your own macros, the
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If you'd like to learn more about writing your own macros, the
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[macrokata](https://github.com/tfpk/macrokata) project has a similar style
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of exercises to Rustlings, but is all about learning to write Macros.
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@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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# Options
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Type Option represents an optional value: every Option is either Some and contains a value, or None, and does not.
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Type Option represents an optional value: every Option is either Some and contains a value, or None, and does not.
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Option types are very common in Rust code, as they have a number of uses:
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- Initial values
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- Return values for functions that are not defined over their entire input range (partial functions)
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@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ fn main() {
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if results.len() != 10 {
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panic!("Oh no! All the spawned threads did not finish!");
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}
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println!();
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for (i, result) in results.into_iter().enumerate() {
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println!("thread {} took {}ms", i, result);
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@ -433,8 +433,8 @@ started, here's a couple of notes about how Rustlings operates:
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4. If an exercise doesn't make sense to you, feel free to open an issue on GitHub!
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(https://github.com/rust-lang/rustlings/issues/new). We look at every issue,
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and sometimes, other learners do too so you can help each other out!
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5. If you want to use `rust-analyzer` with exercises, which provides features like
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autocompletion, run the command `rustlings lsp`.
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5. If you want to use `rust-analyzer` with exercises, which provides features like
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autocompletion, run the command `rustlings lsp`.
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Got all that? Great! To get started, run `rustlings watch` in order to get the first
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exercise. Make sure to have your editor open!"#;
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