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yaml --- r: 214889 b: refs/heads/beta c: 845cee4 h: refs/heads/master i: 214887: c6741e3 v: v3
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[refs]

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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: 32211e1d27c258c62cafb6ba357e67db932367bf
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refs/heads/beta: 845cee4e20532d90454b2d2d1a55d0c2dfcfee09
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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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@@ -565,7 +565,7 @@ opt rpath 0 "build rpaths into rustc itself"
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# This is used by the automation to produce single-target nightlies
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opt dist-host-only 0 "only install bins for the host architecture"
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opt inject-std-version 1 "inject the current compiler version of libstd into programs"
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opt llvm-version-check 1 "don't check if the LLVM version is supported, build anyway"
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opt llvm-version-check 1 "check if the LLVM version is supported, build anyway"
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# Optimization and debugging options. These may be overridden by the release channel, etc.
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opt_nosave optimize 1 "build optimized rust code"

branches/beta/src/doc/trpl/installing-rust.md

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The first step to using Rust is to install it! There are a number of ways to
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install Rust, but the easiest is to use the `rustup` script. If you're on Linux
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or a Mac, all you need to do is this (note that you don't need to type in the
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`$`s, they just indicate the start of each command):
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or a Mac, all you need to do is this:
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> Note: you don't need to type in the `$`s, they just indicate the start of
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> each command. You’ll see many tutorials and examples around the web that
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> follow this convention: `$` for commands run as your regular user, and
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> `#` for commands you should be running as an administrator.
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```bash
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$ curl -sf -L https://static.rust-lang.org/rustup.sh | sh

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

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@@ -213,7 +213,7 @@ As we've said before, an iterator is something that we can call the
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`.next()` method on repeatedly, and it gives us a sequence of things.
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Because you need to call the method, this means that iterators
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can be *lazy* and not generate all of the values upfront. This code,
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for example, does not actually generate the numbers `1-100`, instead
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for example, does not actually generate the numbers `1-99`, instead
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creating a value that merely represents the sequence:
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```rust

branches/beta/src/libstd/collections/hash/table.rs

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// Returns a tuple of (key_offset, val_offset),
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// from the start of a mallocated array.
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#[inline]
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fn calculate_offsets(hashes_size: usize,
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keys_size: usize, keys_align: usize,
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vals_align: usize)

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