foundation-faq-2020
structopt
foundation-faq-2020 | structopt | |
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6 | 18 | |
88 | 2,684 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 2.7 | |
over 3 years ago | 4 months ago | |
Rust | ||
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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foundation-faq-2020
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Rust Foundation - Rust Trademark Policy Draft Revision – Next Steps
You can read all about it here, a great FAQ put together when the foundation was first started.
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How our AWS Rust team will contribute to Rust’s future successes
No. As I understand it, https://github.com/rust-lang/foundation-faq-2020/blob/main/FAQ.md#q-hiring
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Rust Foundation - Hello World!
Not quite 50/50, but from the FAQ (https://github.com/rust-lang/foundation-faq-2020/blob/main/FAQ.md#q-bylaws):
That is possible; see this FAQ for more details. But the foundation will start with small things and plans to extend its scope with time. It's unlikely that you'll notice a difference anytime soon. The foundation could potentially pay contributors for implementing features, but there are currently no plans for this.
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Rust: “Move fast and break things” as a moral imperative
While Rust seems like a great programming language, I have come across some criticisms of it which appear to have some validity. Comparatively more impactful than what Drew describes here is the trademark problem that's listed on Hyperbola GNU/Linux site's webpage titled Rust's Freedom Flaws: https://wiki.hyperbola.info/doku.php?id=en:main:rusts_freedo...
*Please be aware that the rust project is now independent of Mozilla, so the following is not based on the latest information available.
Rust and also Cargo (the Rust package manager) violate the freedom to redistribute without “explicit” approval. Their trademark license imposes requirements for the distribution of modified versions that make it inconvenient to exercise freedom 3. The Rust's Media Guide says it merely supplements the official Mozilla trademark policy; it doesn't replace it. Since their trademark policy applies, then everything in that list (including Rust and Cargo) pulls in the same issue as Firefox and Thunderbird.
In short, Mozilla won't be happy with us applying patches and modifications to their trademarked language without “explicit approval”, except for non-commercial usage, so it is a freedom issue. For further references, there is a report in Rust about those trademark restrictions and Niko's response (one of the members of the Rust Legal Team).
I'm not an expert in this stuff, but this sounds like it could bear some weight. Currently the problem has not been resolved and it is still a matter to be considered by the rust board. Here is the latest thread on the problem I could find on the rust-lang GitHub: https://github.com/rust-lang/foundation-faq-2020/issues/35
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Rust Foundation: Hello, World
They have an unhelpfully generic answer to that in their FAQ: "After spending a significant amount of time researching potential umbrella organizations, we decided that our best option was to incorporate an independent entity. Rust is a technology and community that is value driven and we simply didn’t find an organization that we felt was aligned with our community goals. This does mean more work for us, especially upfront, but we think the tradeoff is worth it."
https://github.com/rust-lang/foundation-faq-2020/blob/main/F...
structopt
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What's the coolest Rust project you've seen that made you go, 'Wow, I didn't know Rust could do that!'?
Hope you are aware that structopt is in maintenance mode and is merged into clap as of v3.
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Task manager for Linux using rust
As I understood you need to implement a command line argument parser for that you can use clap https://github.com/clap-rs/clap or structopt https://github.com/TeXitoi/structopt.
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clap with Ed Page :: Rustacean Station
I feel like discovering moves like this is a weakness in the ecosystem today. You can check out some of our discussion on raising visibility
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clap 3.1: A step towards 4.0
Something I've been giving thought to is how to help structopt users discover that clap3 is their upgrade path. We've put notices in the structopt repo but cargo upgrade and docs.rs won't say anything. See https://github.com/TeXitoi/structopt/issues/525 for more ideas we're considering.
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ANN: clap 3.0.0-rc.0!
For myself, I have found serde.rs really useful for undertanding their derives while I've always been frustrated with finding anything in structopt's documentation, so I modeled it more off of serde. This ended up both being in structure and not being in docs.rs. I think it really was the structure that was the frustration point for me but there was interest elsewhere in moving stuff out of docs.rs.
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fncmd: Command line interface as a function.
I think it would be nice to have a comparison to clap-derive and/or structopt in the README, as that is what I expect most users would compare this to. The subcommand handling looks especially cumbersome compared to deriving on structs and enums.
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Linkerd 2.11 now includes a Kubernetes controller written in Rust
However, the one place I'm a little curious to rewrite things is the CLI... every time we have to deal with cobra I long for Rust's structopt.
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vaultssh: A small CLI wrapper for authenticating with SSH keys from Hashicorp Vault
Have you tried https://github.com/TeXitoi/structopt ?
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SwayWS - a sway workspace tool which allows easy moving of workspaces to and from outputs
It is written in Rust using the structopt and swayipc crates. It is published on crates.io. The repository is hosted on GitLab. The repository is mirrored on GitHub.
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Most Versatile Language for CLI Apps?
I use structopt, which itself uses clap.
What are some alternatives?
hyperscan - High-performance regular expression matching library
clap-rs - A full featured, fast Command Line Argument Parser for Rust
foundation.rust-lang.org - website for Rust Foundation
docopt.rs - Docopt for Rust (command line argument parser).
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
easy_flag - Simple command line flag parser for rust.
sqlx - 🧰 The Rust SQL Toolkit. An async, pure Rust SQL crate featuring compile-time checked queries without a DSL. Supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, and SQLite.
anyhow - Flexible concrete Error type built on std::error::Error
Rusoto - AWS SDK for Rust
rust-starter - Rust Starter Project
mask - 🎭 A CLI task runner defined by a simple markdown file
enum-map