rustc-dev-guide
rustic
rustc-dev-guide | rustic | |
---|---|---|
7 | 11 | |
1,579 | 701 | |
1.3% | - | |
9.3 | 0.0 | |
9 days ago | 21 days ago | |
HTML | Emacs Lisp | |
Apache License 2.0 | 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.
rustc-dev-guide
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The rust project has a burnout problem
yes, it's possible! that list doesn't exist today but i would love to create it. i wrote a draft a few years ago before shifting to other work; someone recently expressed interest in reviving that project: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/pull/1463
<3 i'm glad you enjoyed it
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How Rust transforms into Machine Code.
It's possible - you could open an issue on the rustc-dev-guide repo if you'd like. https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/
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Accessible Documentation?
I'm very confident that this would be well received! I'm not sure where the source code for rustdoc lives, but I know that the internals getting started guide is here: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/blob/master/src/rustdoc.md. That would be a good place to start if you're looking into how the HTML is generated.
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Yet another command line argument parser: bpaf 0.5.5
Do you have links to any good info about how much rustc reuses from previous runs? This is the first time i hear about reuse at the function level. I guess the rustc-dev-guide would be a good place for me to start?
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Discussion Thread
Inspired by the rust compiler, you could represent the entire state of the application as a graph of operations with inputs and outputs. You can hash all the inputs and use that to memoize the operations, so that you don't have to repeat them, you can cache them in memory or on disk, and it helps you track which parts of the app state actually change between user operations and you can then be sure you put all the changes in the undo/redo stack, and so that you don't have to store duplicate copies of things that don't change. (How's that for a run-on sentence?) You could run a general binary diff algorithm between subsequent versions of the same operation with different inputs to try to reduce the memory used by storing the different versions, and have specialized diff algorithms for specific types of data. (How do you identify related operations? How much CPU does this use?) You can have a background task that compresses older versions with LZ4 or zstd. You can have a background task that saves older versions on-disk when there's memory pressure.
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What’s everyone working on this week (11/2022)?
I contributed a couple small bugfixes for issues I ran into along the way as well. 1, 2
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Best practices for writing code comments
It's rustdoc: https://github.com/rust-lang/rustc-dev-guide/blob/master/src...
> Rustdoc actually uses the rustc internals directly. It lives in-tree with the compiler and standard library. This chapter is about how it works. For information about Rustdoc's features and how to use them, see the Rustdoc book. For more details about how rustdoc works, see the "Rustdoc internals" chapter.
rustic
- Accessible Documentation?
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Packages that make Emacs Lisp more pleasant
We will mainly look at 3 packages: s.el, f.el and dash.el. Two of these packages (first and last) are maintained by Magnar Sveen, who are also known for Emacs Rocks and What The .emacs.d (which are still great resources for learning and finding inspiration for your Emacs configuration!). We will also look at ht.el. These packages are used a lot in many of the Emacs packages you use in a day to day basis, like lsp-mode and rustic just to name a few. As most of these already have tons of examples in their READMEs, my main goal of this article is to inspire you to check them out. Hopefully you will know of one new package after reading this article :)
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cant use rust-analyzer Over ssh
I was facing a problem because i wasnt able to run lsp server and i found this issue https://github.com/brotzeit/rustic/issues/217
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rustic 3.3: new command that looks up missing dependencies and adds them to Cargo.toml
In case somebody else is interested in adding missing crates automatically https://github.com/brotzeit/rustic/pull/429
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lsp rust-analyzer does not let me write to a .rs file
;; https://github.com/brotzeit/rustic/issues/253 has been resolved this should
- rustic 3.0 released
- Why rustic-mode slow and freeze
- rustic now depends on rust-mode
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What IDE (or editor) do you use for Rust development?
Emacs with rustic-mode
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What are the most useful VSCode extensions you know which could be reimplemented in Emacs?
https://github.com/brotzeit/rustic uses it out of the box, overall it's a more complete extension than rust-mode.
What are some alternatives?
lang-team - Home of the Rust lang team
rust-mode - Emacs configuration for Rust
bpaf - Command line parser with applicative interface
nvim-treesitter-context - Show code context
sensible-env-logger - A pretty, sensible, easy-to-use logger for Rust.
emacs-edbi - Database Interface for Emacs Lisp
triagebot - Automation/tooling for Rust spaces
postgresql-language-server - PostgreSQL LSP
isahc - The practical HTTP client that is fun to use.
jsdoc.el - Insert JSDoc comments easily with Emacs
MuOxi - MuOxi, a modern mud game engine written in Rust.
docstr - A document string minor mode