Learn more about how the Rust programming language shares many of the advantages offered by Haskell such as a strong type system, great tooling, polymorphism, immutability, concurrency, and great software testing methodologies. Rust is a good choice when you need to squeeze in extra performance.
Rusts type system requires that there only ever is one mutable reference to a value or one or more shared references. What happens when you need multiple references to some value, but also need to mutate through them? We use a trick called interor mutability: to the outside world you act like a value is immutable so multiple references are allowed. But internally the type is actually mutable. All types that provide interior mutability have an UnsafeCell at their core. UnsafeCell is the only primitive that allows multiple mutable pointers to its interior, without violating aliasing rules. The only way to use it safely is to only mutate the wrapped value when there are no other readers. No, the garantee has to be even stronger: we can not mutate it and can not create a mutable reference to the wrapped value while there are shared references to its value. Both the book and the std::cell module give a good alternative explanation of interor mutability. What are some patterns that have been developed to use interior mutability safely? How do multithreaded synchronization primitives that provide interior mutability follow similar principles?
[I]nstead of focusing on one or two concepts, I'll try to go through as many Rust snippets as I can, and explain what the keywords and symbols they contain mean.
Tauri is a framework for building tiny, blazing fast binaries for all major desktop platforms. Developers can integrate any front-end framework that compiles to HTML, JS and CSS for building their user interface.
This site contains code repositories with documentation, and lots of resources. Logging, textFinder, blockingQueue, threadPool, comm, fileSystem, errorHandling, modelling and design patterns.