byteorder
toml
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byteorder
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Fedora to disallow CC0-licensed code
Ditto, I guess? :P (But obviously with the position on the Unlicense flipped.)
To address your indictment head-on: you suggesting the 0BSD as a better alternative is really missing my point. The 0BSD is not an alternative for my use case. The Unlicense is one of the very few overt "political" acts that I inject into the software I produce. Its purpose is to make a statement. The 0BSD doesn't do that IMO, so it's not actually an alternative that meets my advocacy goal.
You and Rick Moen seem to have the same apparent blind spot for this. See my conversation with him that started here (which might also clarify some aspects of my own position): https://github.com/docopt/docopt.rs/issues/1#issuecomment-42...
And finally, note that my dual licensing scheme is exactly a response to the "problems pointed out by quite a few people": https://github.com/BurntSushi/byteorder/issues/26
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Help with encoding variables of different types, taking into account endianness
If you want something more convenient and higher-level, you can (and frankly should) use the byteorder crate, which has a bunch of structures and traits to make dealing with byte order simpler. The only thing it's missing is the ability to adapt (wrap) a stream but that's about it.
- Rust Moderation Team Resigns
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Why does rust change the byteorder of integer types if I print them as hex
Of course in C you can get a pointer to the value and iterate over the raw bytes in memory to print them one at a time, but that's above and beyond just using %x. The easiest way to do this in Rust that I can think of is by using the byteorder crate.
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Read/Write only one byte?
If you're reading and writing numbers a lot, consider using byteorder. Otherwise, you can see how read_u8 and write_u8 are implemented.
toml
- how to write struct data into a file
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Distributed IM Service in Golang
BurntSushi / toml : This is an excellent configuration file format, which I personally prefer
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Rust Moderation Team Resigns
He's also a prominent contributor to the Go ecosystem.
https://github.com/BurntSushi/toml
- BurntSushi/toml is supported again! And by it's by arp242
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GOPROXY alternative for non go modules
There are packages such as https://github.com/BurntSushi/toml which is not a go module, how should I serve it in an airlocked network? For go modules I'm using athens is there something similar to it for non go modules?
What are some alternatives?
serde - Serialization framework for Rust
editorconfig-core-go - EditorConfig Core written in Go
team - Rust teams structure
inject
xgb - The X Go Binding is a low-level API to communicate with the X server. It is modeled on XCB and supports many X extensions.
GoQuery - A little like that j-thing, only in Go.
bitvec - A crate for managing memory bit by bit
gotext - Go (Golang) GNU gettext utilities package
regex - An implementation of regular expressions for Rust. This implementation uses finite automata and guarantees linear time matching on all inputs.
hocon - go implementation of lightbend's HOCON configuration library https://github.com/lightbend/config
wingo - A fully-featured window manager written in Go.
sh - A shell parser, formatter, and interpreter with bash support; includes shfmt