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[refs]

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@@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ refs/tags/0.9: 36870b185fc5f5486636d4515f0e22677493f225
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refs/tags/0.10: ac33f2b15782272ae348dbd7b14b8257b2148b5a
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refs/tags/0.11.0: e1247cb1d0d681be034adb4b558b5a0c0d5720f9
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refs/tags/0.12.0: f0c419429ef30723ceaf6b42f9b5a2aeb5d2e2d1
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refs/heads/beta: 0b1976c2c2426812f2acad60edc520b2646040e3
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refs/heads/beta: 59820fcf61f19650a4e2f0281075f0748f40b454
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refs/tags/1.0.0-alpha: e42bd6d93a1d3433c486200587f8f9e12590a4d7
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refs/heads/tmp: 8c0aa6d64ebab528f7eb182812007155d6044972
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refs/tags/1.0.0-alpha.2: 4c705f6bc559886632d3871b04f58aab093bfa2f

branches/beta/configure

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#!/bin/sh
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msg() {
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echo "configure: $1"
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echo "configure: $*"
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}
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step_msg() {
@@ -33,8 +33,8 @@ need_ok() {
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need_cmd() {
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if command -v $1 >/dev/null 2>&1
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then msg "found program $1"
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else err "need program $1"
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then msg "found program '$1'"
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else err "program '$1' is missing, please install it"
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fi
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}
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branches/beta/mk/dist.mk

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@@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ dist-install-dir-$(1): PREPARE_BIN_CMD=$(DEFAULT_PREPARE_BIN_CMD)
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dist-install-dir-$(1): PREPARE_LIB_CMD=$(DEFAULT_PREPARE_LIB_CMD)
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dist-install-dir-$(1): PREPARE_MAN_CMD=$(DEFAULT_PREPARE_MAN_CMD)
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dist-install-dir-$(1): PREPARE_CLEAN=true
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dist-install-dir-$(1): prepare-base-dir-$(1) docs compiler-docs
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dist-install-dir-$(1): prepare-base-dir-$(1) docs
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$$(Q)mkdir -p $$(PREPARE_DEST_DIR)/share/doc/rust
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$$(Q)$$(PREPARE_MAN_CMD) $$(S)COPYRIGHT $$(PREPARE_DEST_DIR)/share/doc/rust
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$$(Q)$$(PREPARE_MAN_CMD) $$(S)LICENSE-APACHE $$(PREPARE_DEST_DIR)/share/doc/rust
@@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ endif
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--legacy-manifest-dirs=rustlib,cargo
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$$(Q)rm -R tmp/dist/$$(PKG_NAME)-$(1)-image
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dist-doc-install-dir-$(1): docs compiler-docs
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dist-doc-install-dir-$(1): docs
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$$(Q)mkdir -p tmp/dist/$$(DOC_PKG_NAME)-$(1)-image/share/doc/rust
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$$(Q)cp -r doc tmp/dist/$$(DOC_PKG_NAME)-$(1)-image/share/doc/rust/html
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# Just copy the docs to a folder under dist with the appropriate name
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# for uploading to S3
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dist-docs: docs compiler-docs
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dist-docs: docs
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$(Q) rm -Rf dist/doc
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$(Q) mkdir -p dist/doc/
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$(Q) cp -r doc dist/doc/$(CFG_PACKAGE_VERS)

branches/beta/mk/docs.mk

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@@ -77,7 +77,8 @@ ERR_IDX_GEN = $(RPATH_VAR2_T_$(CFG_BUILD)_H_$(CFG_BUILD)) $(ERR_IDX_GEN_EXE)
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D := $(S)src/doc
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DOC_TARGETS := trpl style error-index
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# FIXME (#25705) eventually may want to put error-index target back here.
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DOC_TARGETS := trpl style
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COMPILER_DOC_TARGETS :=
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DOC_L10N_TARGETS :=
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branches/beta/src/doc/reference.md

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@@ -2003,6 +2003,10 @@ arbitrarily complex configurations through nesting.
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The following configurations must be defined by the implementation:
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* `debug_assertions`. Enabled by default when compiling without optimizations.
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This can be used to enable extra debugging code in development but not in
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production. For example, it controls the behavior of the standard library's
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`debug_assert!` macro.
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* `target_arch = "..."`. Target CPU architecture, such as `"x86"`, `"x86_64"`
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`"mips"`, `"powerpc"`, `"arm"`, or `"aarch64"`.
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* `target_endian = "..."`. Endianness of the target CPU, either `"little"` or
@@ -3622,6 +3626,14 @@ The `Sized` trait indicates that the size of this type is known at compile-time.
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The `Drop` trait provides a destructor, to be run whenever a value of this type
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is to be destroyed.
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## The `Deref` trait
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The `Deref<Target = U>` trait allows a type to implicitly implement all the methods
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of the type `U`. When attempting to resolve a method call, the compiler will search
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the top-level type for the implementation of the called method. If no such method is
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found, `.deref()` is called and the compiler continues to search for the method
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implementation in the returned type `U`.
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# Memory model
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A Rust program's memory consists of a static set of *items* and a *heap*.

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/README.md

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@@ -150,8 +150,8 @@ of those times. As the error explains, while we made our binding mutable, we
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still cannot call `push`. This is because we already have a reference to an
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element of the vector, `y`. Mutating something while another reference exists
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is dangerous, because we may invalidate the reference. In this specific case,
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when we create the vector, we may have only allocated space for three elements.
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Adding a fourth would mean allocating a new chunk of memory for all those elements,
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when we create the vector, we may have only allocated space for two elements.
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Adding a third would mean allocating a new chunk of memory for all those elements,
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copying the old values over, and updating the internal pointer to that memory.
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That all works just fine. The problem is that `y` wouldn’t get updated, and so
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we’d have a ‘dangling pointer’. That’s bad. Any use of `y` would be an error in

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/dining-philosophers.md

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For our second project, let’s look at a classic concurrency problem. It’s
44
called ‘the dining philosophers’. It was originally conceived by Dijkstra in
5-
1965, but we’ll use the version from [this paper][paper] by Tony Hoare in 1985.
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1965, but we’ll use a lightly adapted version from [this paper][paper] by Tony
6+
Hoare in 1985.
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[paper]: http://www.usingcsp.com/cspbook.pdf
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910
> In ancient times, a wealthy philanthropist endowed a College to accommodate
10-
> five eminent philosophers. Each philosopher had a room in which she could
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> engage in her professional activity of thinking; there was also a common
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> five eminent philosophers. Each philosopher had a room in which they could
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> engage in their professional activity of thinking; there was also a common
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> dining room, furnished with a circular table, surrounded by five chairs, each
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> labelled by the name of the philosopher who was to sit in it. They sat
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> anticlockwise around the table. To the left of each philosopher there was
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> laid a golden fork, and in the centre stood a large bowl of spaghetti, which
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> was constantly replenished. A philosopher was expected to spend most of her
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> time thinking; but when she felt hungry, she went to the dining room, sat down
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> in her own chair, picked up her own fork on her left, and plunged it into the
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> spaghetti. But such is the tangled nature of spaghetti that a second fork is
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> required to carry it to the mouth. The philosopher therefore had also to pick
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> up the fork on her right. When she was finished she would put down both her
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> forks, get up from her chair, and continue thinking. Of course, a fork can be
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> used by only one philosopher at a time. If the other philosopher wants it, she
24-
> just has to wait until the fork is available again.
17+
> was constantly replenished. A philosopher was expected to spend most of
18+
> their time thinking; but when they felt hungry, they went to the dining
19+
> room, sat down in their own chair, picked up their own fork on their left,
20+
> and plunged it into the spaghetti. But such is the tangled nature of
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> spaghetti that a second fork is required to carry it to the mouth. The
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> philosopher therefore had also to pick up the fork on their right. When
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> they were finished they would put down both their forks, get up from their
24+
> chair, and continue thinking. Of course, a fork can be used by only one
25+
> philosopher at a time. If the other philosopher wants it, they just have
26+
> to wait until the fork is available again.
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2628
This classic problem shows off a few different elements of concurrency. The
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reason is that it's actually slightly tricky to implement: a simple
@@ -60,10 +62,10 @@ impl Philosopher {
6062
}
6163

6264
fn main() {
63-
let p1 = Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza");
65+
let p1 = Philosopher::new("Judith Butler");
6466
let p2 = Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze");
6567
let p3 = Philosopher::new("Karl Marx");
66-
let p4 = Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche");
68+
let p4 = Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman");
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let p5 = Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault");
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}
6971
```
@@ -159,10 +161,10 @@ look at `main()` again:
159161
# }
160162
#
161163
fn main() {
162-
let p1 = Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza");
164+
let p1 = Philosopher::new("Judith Butler");
163165
let p2 = Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze");
164166
let p3 = Philosopher::new("Karl Marx");
165-
let p4 = Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche");
167+
let p4 = Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman");
166168
let p5 = Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault");
167169
}
168170
```
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# name: String,
177179
# }
178180
fn main() {
179-
let p1 = Philosopher { name: "Baruch Spinoza".to_string() };
181+
let p1 = Philosopher { name: "Judith Butler".to_string() };
180182
let p2 = Philosopher { name: "Gilles Deleuze".to_string() };
181183
let p3 = Philosopher { name: "Karl Marx".to_string() };
182-
let p4 = Philosopher { name: "Friedrich Nietzche".to_string() };
184+
let p4 = Philosopher { name: "Emma Goldman".to_string() };
183185
let p5 = Philosopher { name: "Michel Foucault".to_string() };
184186
}
185187
```
@@ -211,10 +213,10 @@ impl Philosopher {
211213

212214
fn main() {
213215
let philosophers = vec![
214-
Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza"),
216+
Philosopher::new("Judith Butler"),
215217
Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze"),
216218
Philosopher::new("Karl Marx"),
217-
Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche"),
219+
Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman"),
218220
Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault"),
219221
];
220222

@@ -247,10 +249,10 @@ mention they’re done eating. Running this program should give you the followin
247249
output:
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249251
```text
250-
Baruch Spinoza is done eating.
252+
Judith Butler is done eating.
251253
Gilles Deleuze is done eating.
252254
Karl Marx is done eating.
253-
Friedrich Nietzsche is done eating.
255+
Emma Goldman is done eating.
254256
Michel Foucault is done eating.
255257
```
256258

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285287

286288
fn main() {
287289
let philosophers = vec![
288-
Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza"),
290+
Philosopher::new("Judith Butler"),
289291
Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze"),
290292
Philosopher::new("Karl Marx"),
291-
Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche"),
293+
Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman"),
292294
Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault"),
293295
];
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323325
If you run this program, you should see each philosopher eat in turn:
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325327
```text
326-
Baruch Spinoza is eating.
327-
Baruch Spinoza is done eating.
328+
Judith Butler is eating.
329+
Judith Butler is done eating.
328330
Gilles Deleuze is eating.
329331
Gilles Deleuze is done eating.
330332
Karl Marx is eating.
331333
Karl Marx is done eating.
332-
Friedrich Nietzsche is eating.
333-
Friedrich Nietzsche is done eating.
334+
Emma Goldman is eating.
335+
Emma Goldman is done eating.
334336
Michel Foucault is eating.
335337
Michel Foucault is done eating.
336338
```
@@ -366,10 +368,10 @@ impl Philosopher {
366368

367369
fn main() {
368370
let philosophers = vec![
369-
Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza"),
371+
Philosopher::new("Judith Butler"),
370372
Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze"),
371373
Philosopher::new("Karl Marx"),
372-
Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche"),
374+
Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman"),
373375
Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault"),
374376
];
375377

@@ -458,11 +460,11 @@ We have multi-threading!
458460
```text
459461
Gilles Deleuze is eating.
460462
Gilles Deleuze is done eating.
461-
Friedrich Nietzsche is eating.
462-
Friedrich Nietzsche is done eating.
463+
Emma Goldman is eating.
464+
Emma Goldman is done eating.
463465
Michel Foucault is eating.
464-
Baruch Spinoza is eating.
465-
Baruch Spinoza is done eating.
466+
Judith Butler is eating.
467+
Judith Butler is done eating.
466468
Karl Marx is eating.
467469
Karl Marx is done eating.
468470
Michel Foucault is done eating.
@@ -532,10 +534,10 @@ fn main() {
532534
]});
533535

534536
let philosophers = vec![
535-
Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza", 0, 1),
537+
Philosopher::new("Judith Butler", 0, 1),
536538
Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze", 1, 2),
537539
Philosopher::new("Karl Marx", 2, 3),
538-
Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche", 3, 4),
540+
Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman", 3, 4),
539541
Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault", 0, 4),
540542
];
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@@ -643,10 +645,10 @@ count will go up, and when each thread ends, it will go back down.
643645

644646
```rust,ignore
645647
let philosophers = vec![
646-
Philosopher::new("Baruch Spinoza", 0, 1),
648+
Philosopher::new("Judith Butler", 0, 1),
647649
Philosopher::new("Gilles Deleuze", 1, 2),
648650
Philosopher::new("Karl Marx", 2, 3),
649-
Philosopher::new("Friedrich Nietzsche", 3, 4),
651+
Philosopher::new("Emma Goldman", 3, 4),
650652
Philosopher::new("Michel Foucault", 0, 4),
651653
];
652654
```
@@ -679,12 +681,12 @@ and so you’ll get some output like this:
679681

680682
```text
681683
Gilles Deleuze is eating.
682-
Friedrich Nietzsche is eating.
683-
Friedrich Nietzsche is done eating.
684+
Emma Goldman is eating.
685+
Emma Goldman is done eating.
684686
Gilles Deleuze is done eating.
685-
Baruch Spinoza is eating.
687+
Judith Butler is eating.
686688
Karl Marx is eating.
687-
Baruch Spinoza is done eating.
689+
Judith Butler is done eating.
688690
Michel Foucault is eating.
689691
Karl Marx is done eating.
690692
Michel Foucault is done eating.

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/guessing-game.md

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For example, they’re [immutable][immutable] by default. That’s why our example
149149
uses `mut`: it makes a binding mutable, rather than immutable. `let` doesn’t
150150
take a name on the left hand side, it actually accepts a
151-
[pattern][patterns]’. We’ll use patterns more later. It’s easy enough
151+
[pattern][patterns]’. We’ll use patterns later. It’s easy enough
152152
to use for now:
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154154
```rust
@@ -637,7 +637,7 @@ When we wrote `let guess = String::new()`, Rust was able to infer that `guess`
637637
should be a `String`, and so it doesn’t make us write out the type. And with
638638
our `secret_number`, there are a number of types which can have a value
639639
between one and a hundred: `i32`, a thirty-two-bit number, or `u32`, an
640-
unsigned thirty-two-bit number, or `i64`, a sixty-four-bit number. Or others.
640+
unsigned thirty-two-bit number, or `i64`, a sixty-four-bit number or others.
641641
So far, that hasn’t mattered, and so Rust defaults to an `i32`. However, here,
642642
Rust doesn’t know how to compare the `guess` and the `secret_number`. They
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need to be the same type. Ultimately, we want to convert the `String` we

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/the-stack-and-the-heap.md

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| 0 | x | ?????? |
278278

279279
[drop]: drop.html
280-
[moving]: We can make the memory live longer by transferring ownership,
281-
sometimes called ‘moving out of the box’. More complex examples will
282-
be covered later.
280+
[^moving]: We can make the memory live longer by transferring ownership,
281+
sometimes called ‘moving out of the box’. More complex examples will
282+
be covered later.
283283

284284

285285
And then the stack frame goes away, freeing all of our memory.

branches/beta/src/liballoc/rc.rs

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144144
//! // At the end of the method, gadget_owner, gadget1 and gadget2 get
145145
//! // destroyed. There are now no strong (`Rc<T>`) references to the gadgets.
146146
//! // Once they get destroyed, the Gadgets get destroyed. This zeroes the
147-
//! // reference count on Gadget Man, so he gets destroyed as well.
147+
//! // reference count on Gadget Man, they get destroyed as well.
148148
//! }
149149
//! ```
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branches/beta/src/libcollections/lib.rs

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#![feature(str_char)]
4040
#![feature(str_words)]
4141
#![feature(slice_patterns)]
42-
#![feature(debug_builders)]
4342
#![feature(utf8_error)]
4443
#![cfg_attr(test, feature(rand, rustc_private, test, hash, collections,
4544
collections_drain, collections_range))]

branches/beta/src/libcollections/vec.rs

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//! A growable list type with heap-allocated contents, written `Vec<T>` but
1212
//! pronounced 'vector.'
1313
//!
14-
//! Vectors have `O(1)` indexing, push (to the end) and pop (from the end).
14+
//! Vectors have `O(1)` indexing, amortized `O(1)` push (to the end) and
15+
//! `O(1)` pop (from the end).
1516
//!
1617
//! # Examples
1718
//!

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