awesome-rust
friedrich
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awesome-rust | friedrich | |
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37 | 2 | |
42,654 | 50 | |
2.9% | - | |
9.4 | 0.0 | |
8 days ago | 4 months ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | Apache License 2.0 |
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awesome-rust
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Help me stop hating rust
It can be tricky to find learning resources that is perfectly tailored to the exact point we’re you’re standing right now. Especially if you already have prior experience.
But since you’re already familiar with programming, perhaps just dive right in…?
I.e. start a new project in Rust. You could do something like Advent of Code, Project Euler or Cryptopals[0]. Or write a simple webserver or whatever you feel like.
Don’t forget that ChatGPT can be quite useful for stuff like this. You can use it like a mentor. Just ask it anything you want to, make it show you examples (and then more examples) and so on. The answers might not be correct all of the time, but at least it can give you an idea of what docs to read next.
If you’re looking for blog posts, an acquaintance of mine has written some: https://priver.dev/tags/rust/
For more links to code/learning resources, see https://github.com/rust-unofficial/awesome-rust
And if you get stuck you also have the official Rust chats on Zulip/Discord.
HTH. Best of luck!
[0] https://cryptopals.com/
- A curated list of Rust code and resources
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Writing your own CLI in rust
View on GitHub
- What are some of projects to start with for a beginner in rust but experienced in programming (ex: C++, Go, python) ?
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Disappointing experience with 'Command-Line Rust': Seeking more comprehensive Rust resources
I did find the official https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ quite useful, it's more than enough to understand the language itself. Command-line programing is not a complicated thing, basically you have the CLI arguments, environment variables, stdin-stdout-sterr and nothing else. A few crates to start with: clap, dotenv, config, log4rs. Just go the crate documentation, there are many good examples there, no other book is neccessary. If you have a specific problem to solve, start to browse crates.io or https://github.com/rust-unofficial/awesome-rust for possible solutions.
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58 Rust Resources Every Learner Should Know in 2023
37. Awesome Rust is a great repo with a huge curated list of plenty with Rust code and resources. You can find complete applications in different areas that were built based on Rust.
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GitHub official Twitter account just posted about my Rust project: if it’s a dream don’t wake me up
Post it there https://github.com/rust-unofficial/awesome-rust
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Need Project Idea Advice
I'd recommend taking a look at https://github.com/rust-unofficial/awesome-rust and seeing if anything interests you that way.
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Rust project list from simple to complex?
Not really sorted by complexity, but awesome-rust might be close to what you're looking for.
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Blessed.rs – An unofficial guide to the Rust ecosystem
See also:
https://github.com/rust-unofficial/awesome-rust
This list is currently far more comprehensive, and it's filled with a lot of high-quality crates.
friedrich
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How far along is the ML ecosystem with Rust?
For other algorithms, there is not yet a single library to rule them all (linfa might become that at some point) but searching for the algorithm you need on crate.io is likely to give you some results (obligatory plug to Friedrich, my gaussian process implementation).
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Interactive Visualization of Gaussian Processes
For me the good reason to use gaussian regression is the fact that you get an uncertainty on the output.
The big downside is that it takes expert knowledge (to design a proper kernel) and a solid implementation (to avoid the various numerical problems they can produce) to apply them to practical problem. Most implementation either break down very quickly or are not flexible enough for my taste.
I have a Rust implementation [0] which tries to help with the flexibility aspect but it is still very far from perfect.
[0]: https://github.com/nestordemeure/friedrich
What are some alternatives?
pulsar-rs - Rust Client library for Apache Pulsar
Peroxide - Rust numeric library with R, MATLAB & Python syntax
starsector-mod-manager-rust - A mod manager for Starsector, a space fleet-battle and economics simulator. This time written in Rust.
rust - Rust for the xtensa architecture. Built in targets for the ESP32 and ESP8266
RustScan - 🤖 The Modern Port Scanner 🤖
tch-rs - Rust bindings for the C++ api of PyTorch.
quaint - SQL Query AST and Visitor for Rust
linfa - A Rust machine learning framework.
static-analysis - ⚙️ A curated list of static analysis (SAST) tools and linters for all programming languages, config files, build tools, and more. The focus is on tools which improve code quality.
tangram - Tangram makes it easy for programmers to train, deploy, and monitor machine learning models.
odbc-api - ODBC (Open Database Connectivity) bindings for Rust.
tract - Tiny, no-nonsense, self-contained, Tensorflow and ONNX inference