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[refs]

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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ refs/tags/release-0.3: b5f0d0f648d9a6153664837026ba1be43d3e2503
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refs/tags/release-0.3.1: 495bae036dfe5ec6ceafd3312b4dca48741e845b
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refs/tags/release-0.4: e828ea2080499553b97dfe33b3f4d472b4562ad7
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refs/tags/release-0.5: 7e3bcfbf21278251ee936ad53e92e9b719702d73
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refs/heads/auto: e20a6dbeed095427e5d5487844f65e7eb1599651
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refs/heads/auto: 01ab4f761c09830bdd77726f5ae2351e9e3432c4
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refs/heads/servo: af82457af293e2a842ba6b7759b70288da276167
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refs/tags/release-0.6: b4ebcfa1812664df5e142f0134a5faea3918544c
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refs/tags/0.1: b19db808c2793fe2976759b85a355c3ad8c8b336

branches/auto/mk/cfg/x86_64-pc-windows-msvc.mk

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@@ -9,8 +9,8 @@ CFG_STATIC_LIB_NAME_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc=$(1).lib
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CFG_LIB_GLOB_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc=$(1)-*.dll
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CFG_LIB_DSYM_GLOB_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc=$(1)-*.dylib.dSYM
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CFG_JEMALLOC_CFLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc :=
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CFG_GCCISH_CFLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc :=
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CFG_GCCISH_CXXFLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc :=
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CFG_GCCISH_CFLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc := -MD
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CFG_GCCISH_CXXFLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc := -MD
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CFG_GCCISH_LINK_FLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc :=
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CFG_GCCISH_DEF_FLAG_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc :=
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CFG_LLC_FLAGS_x86_64-pc-windows-msvc :=

branches/auto/mk/docs.mk

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@@ -169,6 +169,7 @@ DOC_TARGETS += doc/not_found.html
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doc/not_found.html: $(D)/not_found.md $(HTML_DEPS) | doc/
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@$(call E, rustdoc: $@)
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$(Q)$(RUSTDOC) $(RUSTDOC_HTML_OPTS_NO_CSS) \
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--markdown-no-toc \
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--markdown-css http://doc.rust-lang.org/rust.css $<
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define DEF_DOC

branches/auto/src/compiletest/runtest.rs

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@@ -651,7 +651,7 @@ fn run_debuginfo_lldb_test(config: &Config, props: &TestProps, testfile: &Path)
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// Write debugger script:
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// We don't want to hang when calling `quit` while the process is still running
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let mut script_str = String::from_str("settings set auto-confirm true\n");
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let mut script_str = String::from("settings set auto-confirm true\n");
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// Make LLDB emit its version, so we have it documented in the test output
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script_str.push_str("version\n");

branches/auto/src/doc/grammar.md

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@@ -281,7 +281,8 @@ type_path_tail : '<' type_expr [ ',' type_expr ] + '>'
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## Macros
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```antlr
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expr_macro_rules : "macro_rules" '!' ident '(' macro_rule * ')' ;
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expr_macro_rules : "macro_rules" '!' ident '(' macro_rule * ')' ';'
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| "macro_rules" '!' ident '{' macro_rule * '}' ;
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macro_rule : '(' matcher * ')' "=>" '(' transcriber * ')' ';' ;
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matcher : '(' matcher * ')' | '[' matcher * ']'
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| '{' matcher * '}' | '$' ident ':' ident

branches/auto/src/doc/not_found.md

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@@ -11,20 +11,20 @@ Looks like you've taken a wrong turn.
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Some things that might be helpful to you though:
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## Search
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# Search
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* <form action="https://duckduckgo.com/">
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<input type="text" id="site-search" name="q" size="80"></input>
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<input type="submit" value="Search DuckDuckGo">
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</form>
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* Rust doc search: <span id="core-search"></span>
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## Reference
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# Reference
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* [The Rust official site](http://rust-lang.org)
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* [The Rust reference](http://doc.rust-lang.org/reference.html)
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## Docs
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# Docs
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* [The standard library](http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/)
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branches/auto/src/doc/reference.md

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@@ -1038,7 +1038,7 @@ be undesired.
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* Deadlocks
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* Reading data from private fields (`std::repr`)
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* Leaks due to reference count cycles, even in the global heap
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* Leaks of memory and other resources
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* Exiting without calling destructors
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* Sending signals
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* Accessing/modifying the file system
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```
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trait Foo {
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fn bar(&self);
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fn baz(&self) { println!("We called baz."); }
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}
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```
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```
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Generic functions may use traits as _bounds_ on their type parameters. This
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will have two effects: only types that have the trait may instantiate the
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parameter, and within the generic function, the methods of the trait can be
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called on values that have the parameter's type. For example:
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will have two effects:
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- Only types that have the trait may instantiate the parameter.
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- Within the generic function, the methods of the trait can be
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called on values that have the parameter's type.
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For example:
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```
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# type Surface = i32;
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An example of an `as` expression:
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```
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# fn sum(v: &[f64]) -> f64 { 0.0 }
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# fn len(v: &[f64]) -> i32 { 0 }
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# fn sum(values: &[f64]) -> f64 { 0.0 }
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# fn len(values: &[f64]) -> i32 { 0 }
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fn avg(v: &[f64]) -> f64 {
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let sum: f64 = sum(v);
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let sz: f64 = len(v) as f64;
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return sum / sz;
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fn average(values: &[f64]) -> f64 {
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let sum: f64 = sum(values);
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let size: f64 = len(values) as f64;
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sum / size
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}
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```
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branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/closures.md

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assert_eq!(4, plus_two(2));
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```
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You’ll notice a few things about closures that are a bit different than regular
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functions defined with `fn`. The first of which is that we did not need to
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You’ll notice a few things about closures that are a bit different from regular
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functions defined with `fn`. The first is that we did not need to
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annotate the types of arguments the closure takes or the values it returns. We
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can:
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While specifying the full type for named functions is helpful with things like
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documentation and type inference, the types of closures are rarely documented
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since they’re anonymous, and they don’t cause the kinds of error-at-a-distance
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that inferring named function types can.
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problems that inferring named function types can.
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The second is that the syntax is similar, but a bit different. I’ve added spaces
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here to make them look a little closer:
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here for easier comparison:
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```rust
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fn plus_one_v1 (x: i32) -> i32 { x + 1 }
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let plus_one_v2 = |x: i32| -> i32 { x + 1 };
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let plus_one_v3 = |x: i32| x + 1 ;
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```
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Small differences, but they’re similar in ways.
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Small differences, but they’re similar.
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# Closures and their environment
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fn main() {
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let mut num = 5;
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let plus_num = |x| x + num;
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let y = &mut num;
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}
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^
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```rust
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let mut num = 5;
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{
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{
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let mut add_num = |x: i32| num += x;
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add_num(5);
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```rust
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let mut num = 5;
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{
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{
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let mut add_num = move |x: i32| num += x;
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add_num(5);

branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/comments.md

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/// let five = 5;
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///
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/// assert_eq!(6, add_one(5));
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/// # fn add_one(x: i32) -> i32 {
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/// # x + 1
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/// # }
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/// ```
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fn add_one(x: i32) -> i32 {
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x + 1

branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/const-and-static.md

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[unsafe]: unsafe.html
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Furthermore, any type stored in a `static` must be `Sync`.
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Furthermore, any type stored in a `static` must be `Sync`, and may not have
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a [`Drop`][drop] implementation.
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[drop]: drop.html
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# Initializing
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rare that you actually want a memory location associated with your constant,
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and using a const allows for optimizations like constant propagation not only
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in your crate but downstream crates.
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A const can be thought of as a `#define` in C: it has metadata overhead but it
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has no runtime overhead. “Should I use a #define or a static in C,” is largely
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the same question as whether you should use a const or a static in Rust.

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

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ownership of the values it’s capturing. Primarily, the `p` variable of the
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`map` function.
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Inside the thread, all we do is call `eat()` on `p`.
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Inside the thread, all we do is call `eat()` on `p`. Also note that the call to `thread::spawn` lacks a trailing semicolon, making this an expression. This distinction is important, yielding the correct return value. For more details, read [Expressions vs. Statements][es].
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[es]: functions.html#expressions-vs.-statements
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```rust,ignore
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}).collect();
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Finally, inside of our `map()`/`collect()` loop, we call `table.clone()`. The
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`clone()` method on `Arc<T>` is what bumps up the reference count, and when it
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goes out of scope, it decrements the count. You’ll notice we can introduce a
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new binding to `table` here, and it will shadow the old one. This is often used
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so that you don’t need to come up with two unique names.
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goes out of scope, it decrements the count. This is needed so that we know how
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many references to `table` exist across our threads. If we didn’t have a count,
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we wouldn’t know how to deallocate it.
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You’ll notice we can introduce a new binding to `table` here, and it will
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shadow the old one. This is often used so that you don’t need to come up with
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two unique names.
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With this, our program works! Only two philosophers can eat at any one time,
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and so you’ll get some output like this:

branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/enums.md

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[match]: match.html
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[if-let]: if-let.html
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[traits]: traits.html
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# Constructors as functions
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An enum’s constructors can also be used like functions. For example:
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```rust
73+
# enum Message {
74+
# Write(String),
75+
# }
76+
let m = Message::Write("Hello, world".to_string());
77+
```
78+
79+
Is the same as
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```rust
82+
# enum Message {
83+
# Write(String),
84+
# }
85+
fn foo(x: String) -> Message {
86+
Message::Write(x)
87+
}
88+
89+
let x = foo("Hello, world".to_string());
90+
```
91+
92+
This is not immediately useful to us, but when we get to
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[`closures`][closures], we’ll talk about passing functions as arguments to
94+
other functions. For example, with [`iterators`][iterators], we can do this
95+
to convert a vector of `String`s into a vector of `Message::Write`s:
96+
97+
```rust
98+
# enum Message {
99+
# Write(String),
100+
# }
101+
102+
let v = vec!["Hello".to_string(), "World".to_string()];
103+
104+
let v1: Vec<Message> = v.into_iter().map(Message::Write).collect();
105+
```
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107+
[closures]: closures.html
108+
[iterators]: iterators.html

branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/error-handling.md

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@@ -284,7 +284,7 @@ struct Info {
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}
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fn write_info(info: &Info) -> io::Result<()> {
287-
let mut file = try!(File::create("my_best_friends.txt"));
287+
let mut file = File::create("my_best_friends.txt").unwrap();
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289289
try!(writeln!(&mut file, "name: {}", info.name));
290290
try!(writeln!(&mut file, "age: {}", info.age));

branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/ffi.md

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Rust object. This could be the object that represents the wrapper for the
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respective C object.
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This can be achieved by passing an unsafe pointer to the object down to the
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This can be achieved by passing an raw pointer to the object down to the
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C library. The C library can then include the pointer to the Rust object in
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the notification. This will allow the callback to unsafely access the
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referenced Rust object.
@@ -342,8 +342,10 @@ Note that frameworks are only available on OSX targets.
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The different `kind` values are meant to differentiate how the native library
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participates in linkage. From a linkage perspective, the rust compiler creates
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two flavors of artifacts: partial (rlib/staticlib) and final (dylib/binary).
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Native dynamic libraries and frameworks are propagated to the final artifact
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boundary, while static libraries are not propagated at all.
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Native dynamic library and framework dependencies are propagated to the final
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artifact boundary, while static library dependencies are not propagated at
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all, because the static libraries are integrated directly into the subsequent
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artifact.
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A few examples of how this model can be used are:
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# Unsafe blocks
370372
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Some operations, like dereferencing unsafe pointers or calling functions that have been marked
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Some operations, like dereferencing raw pointers or calling functions that have been marked
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unsafe are only allowed inside unsafe blocks. Unsafe blocks isolate unsafety and are a promise to
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the compiler that the unsafety does not leak out of the block.
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branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/functions.md

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Note that assigning to an already-bound variable (e.g. `y = 5`) is still an
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expression, although its value is not particularly useful. Unlike other
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languages where an assignment evaluates to the assigned value (e.g. `5` in the
147-
previous example), in Rust the value of an assignment is an empty tuple `()`:
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previous example), in Rust the value of an assignment is an empty tuple `()`
148+
because the assigned value can have [just one owner](ownership.html), and any
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other returned value would be too surprising:
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```rust
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let mut y = 5;

branches/auto/src/doc/trpl/generics.md

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% Generics
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Sometimes, when writing a function or data type, we may want it to work for
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multiple types of arguments. Luckily, Rust has a feature that gives us a better
5-
way: generics. Generics are called ‘parametric polymorphism’ in type theory,
4+
multiple types of arguments. In Rust, we can do this with generics.
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Generics are called ‘parametric polymorphism’ in type theory,
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which means that they are types or functions that have multiple forms (‘poly’
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is multiple, ‘morph’ is form) over a given parameter (‘parametric’).
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