In the spirit of Software Tools, the aim is to make components re-usable in three ways:
Result
type, so the caller
can decide how to deal with the error.A fourth avenue may be explored, which is to adopt the nushell approach to transfering tabular data between commands.
For a related project that also follows Software Tools in Rust, and may serve as an interesting comparison, see Sweater.
Higher-order-functions (HOFs) are frequently used to reduce code
complexity, verbosity, and the risk of errors. Primary examples are
map
, for_each
(like map
but effectful), and fold
. As pointed
out in Software Tools, pp 21, "The best programs are designed in
terms of loosely coupled functions that each does a simple task."
cp
wc
detab
Since the goal is to make the software both as self-contained and as illustrative as possible, we've tried to rely on very few dependencies. The following exceptions exist:
std
's mutable structures for large
data types, and while Rust makes mutation far safer than most languages,
mutation can still result in confusion at times, so in the cases where
clarity is more important than performance (or performance doesn't
matter much, e.g. one-ops), it may be preferable to use immutable data
structures.Using todo!()
from std::todo
is a helpful way to incrementally
develop a feature while still getting feedback from the
compiler. [TODO: show example]
A caveat is that
currently you need code in the function after the todo!()
, even
if it doesn't match the type. For instance, we can use a function
like:
rust
pub fn some_num() -> i32 {
todo!(); ();
}
Most beneficial is that rustc
will warn you if you a todo!()
is
left in your code, since it would result in a panic if that execution
path were to occur.
```plain nix-shell -p rustup cargo
```
Currently, to generate small builds the following commands are required.
plain
rustup component add rust-src --toolchain nightly
2.
plain
cargo +nightly build -Z build-std --target x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu --release
strip
binary - see links in notesWe use cargo-husky to keep in
line; it enforces several checks with a pre-push
hook. Sometimes it
is a bit restrictive, so if we need to push
in-progress work to a branch, we can use
git push --no-verify -u origin feature_branch
.
Cargo-husky expects certain files to be at the root of the repository,
thus the symlinks.
We include the following, less stringent checks for pre-commit.
```bash
#
for FILE in git diff --cached --name-only
; do
if [[ -f "$FILE" ]] && [[ $FILE == *.rs ]] \
&& ! rustup run nightly rustfmt --unstable-features \
--skip-children $FILE; then
echo "Commit rejected due to invalid formatting of \"$FILE\" file."
exit 1
fi
done
cd Rust/sfw-tools && cargo readme > README.md && git add README.md
``
As can be seen this also gnerates the README from doc comments in
lib.rs`.
License: MPL-2.0