book
rust-blog
Our great sponsors
book | rust-blog | |
---|---|---|
626 | 63 | |
14,211 | 6,608 | |
2.5% | - | |
6.9 | 5.0 | |
5 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
book
-
Learning Rust: A clean start
My first port of call was to google learn rust which lead me to "the book". The book is a first steps guide written by the rust community for newbies (or Rustlings as they're called) to gain a 'solid grasp of the language'.
-
Prodzilla: From Zero to Prod with Rust and Shuttle
Before Prodzilla, I’d read 'The Book' a couple of times, and had made my way through Rustlings, but hadn’t yet built a serious project in Rust.
-
Help me stop hating rust
To answer your last question;
Start with the Rust book.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/
Then do Rustlings until the syntax becomes muscle memory.
Then join the Discord and start doing little projects.
You won’t get up to the proficiency of other languages as quickly in Rust. It takes longer. For me it’s taking a lot longer, but I enjoy it.
-
Top 10 Rusty Repositories for you to start your Open Source Journey
Before diving into these repositories, familiarize yourself with Rust and its development ecosystem. The official Rust book is an excellent resource for developers at all levels. Each repository has documentation on how to contribute, covering code style, issue tracking, and pull requests.
-
Command Line Rust is a great book
This is my third Rust book after the official book and Rust in Action. The other two books are great, but they were too theoretical for me. I'm a slow learner and had much trouble grokking Rust's features and idiosyncrasies. When I was done with these books, I was lost and unsure of what I could do.
- Advice Sought: Double down on Solidity dev or switch to Product?
-
Nim
It's the same reason everything digital and downloadable isn't free: there's a cost to create it and there's a value to it.
For a language developer to charge for a book about that language, I think that's a completely valid way to make some money off of their work.
Even the Rust book, "The Rust Programming Language" is available freely online [0], but also as a print and ebook for sale via NoStarchPress [1].
[0] https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/
[1] https://nostarch.com/rust-programming-language-2nd-edition
-
Systems programming - Rust
You know you can just read it online right now in 2 different variants It does contain some systems programming.
-
Ask HN: How do you learn Rust in 2023?
I am looking at The Book (https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/), but hoped there was an amazing person on youtube.
Yeah, I'll build something, finally trying webassembly.
-
Give me the best Resources to learn Rust
https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ https://github.com/rust-lang/rustlings https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/
rust-blog
- Common Rust Lifetime Misconceptions
-
What are some good resources for experienced programmers new to Rust to learn about lifetimes?
Hands down the best resource (after you've had sufficient experience with Rust, especially so) - https://github.com/pretzelhammer/rust-blog/blob/master/posts/common-rust-lifetime-misconceptions.md
-
How can a parameter type `T` be not long living enough?
I really really recommend reading this to understand lifetimes and generics in Rust better.
- What learning resource has had the greatest impact in elevating your understanding and knowledge of Rust?
- I do not understand why Sized bound prevents a trait from being used as a trait object.
-
Lifetime annotations: why doesn't Rust?
It's already now that the elided lifetimes are not always correct, as pointed out in Common Rust Lifetime Misconceptions (No 5) by pretzelhammer.
-
Anything C can do Rust can do Better
Common Rust Lifetime Misconceptions - kirill
-
Resources on Lifetimes
Probably a bit more advanced than what you asked about, but still possibly useful: Common Rust Lifetime Misconceptions by /u/pretzelhammer.
-
Borrow checker puzzles
This helped me a lot understanding Rust ownership rules and lifetimes: https://github.com/pretzelhammer/rust-blog/blob/master/posts/common-rust-lifetime-misconceptions.md
What are some alternatives?
rust-by-example - Learn Rust with examples (Live code editor included)
zero-to-production - Code for "Zero To Production In Rust", a book on API development using Rust.
Rustlings - :crab: Small exercises to get you used to reading and writing Rust code!
fluvio - Lean and mean distributed stream processing system written in rust and web assembly.
solana-program-library - A collection of Solana programs maintained by Solana Labs
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.
nomicon - The Dark Arts of Advanced and Unsafe Rust Programming
github-cheat-sheet - A list of cool features of Git and GitHub.
mini-redis - Incomplete Redis client and server implementation using Tokio - for learning purposes only
rust - Empowering everyone to build reliable and efficient software.
polonius - Defines the Rust borrow checker.