The Rust Programming Language
Rust is a systems programming language focused on three goals: safety, speed, and concurrency. It maintains these goals without having a garbage collector, making it a useful language for a number of use cases other languages aren’t good at: embedding in other languages, programs with specific space and time requirements, and writing low-level code, like device drivers and operating systems. It improves on current languages targeting this space by having a number of compile-time safety checks that produce no runtime overhead, while eliminating all data races. Rust also aims to achieve ‘zero-cost abstractions’ even though some of these abstractions feel like those of a high-level language. Even then, Rust still allows precise control like a low-level language would.
- Sources inherited from project SUSE:SLE-15-SP4:Update
- Download package
-
Checkout Package
osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout SUSE:SLE-15-SP7:Update/rust.31608 && cd $_
- Create Badge
Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
README | 0000000079 79 Bytes | |
rust-rpmlintrc | 0000000103 103 Bytes | |
rust.changes | 0000162671 159 KB | |
rust.spec | 0000003061 2.99 KB |
Latest Revision
Release from SUSE:Maintenance:31608 / rust.SUSE_SLE-15-SP4_Update
Comments 0