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Cake day: June 15th, 2023

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  • aDogCalledSpot@lemmy.ziptoProgrammer Humor@lemmy.mlcodeStyle
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    7 months ago

    I think Rust actually is actually among the best in this regard for the simple reason that there is consistency given by the compiler. A simple cargo fmt and cargo build will fix or warn you about everything. I can read into Rust codebases so quickly. C++ was always really exhausting because most of the time you were just getting used to the code style.


  • aDogCalledSpot@lemmy.ziptoRust@programming.devRust without crates.io
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    11 months ago

    What’s interesting is that this problem is largely solved for C and C++: Linux distributions like Debian package such a wide range of libraries that for many things that you want to develop or install, you don’t need any third-party libraries at all.

    This person has made some very different experiences to myself. How does C++ handle versioning? How do you compare versions across distros or even OSs? How do you control which features are included? How do you make sure your chosen build tools finds these files?

    Projects like conan try to do what crates.io does for Rust and it’s not the greatest experience. The other direction is something like Buck2 that puts the whole dependency in your project so you can have hermetic builds.

    I have no idea how any of this can be seen as an advantage in a development workflow.