-// Before going on, take a moment to ponder the flexibility of Rust's take on abstraction:
-// We just defined our own, custom trait (interface), and then implemented that trait
-// *for an existing type*. With the hierarchical approach of, e.g., C++ or Java,
-// that's not possible: We cannot make an existing type suddenly also inherit from our abstract base class.
-//
-// In case you are worried about performance, note that Rust performs *monomorphisation*
-// of generic functions: When you call `vec_min` with `T` being `i32`, Rust essentially goes
-// ahead and creates a copy of the function for this particular type, filling in all the blanks.
-// In this case, the call to `T::min` will become a call to our implementation *statically*. There is
-// no dynamic dispatch, like there would be for Java interface methods or C++ `virtual` methods.
-// This behavior is similar to C++ templates. The optimizer (Rust is using LLVM) then has all the
-// information it could want to, e.g., inline function calls.
-
-// To make the function usable with a `Vec<i32>`, we implement the `Minimum` trait for `i32`.
+//@ Before going on, take a moment to ponder the flexibility of Rust's take on abstraction:
+//@ We just defined our own, custom trait (interface), and then implemented that trait
+//@ *for an existing type*. With the hierarchical approach of, e.g., C++ or Java,
+//@ that's not possible: We cannot make an existing type also inherit from our abstract base class
+//@ after the fact.
+//@
+//@ In case you are worried about performance, note that Rust performs *monomorphisation*
+//@ of generic functions: When you call `vec_min` with `T` being `i32`, Rust essentially goes
+//@ ahead and creates a copy of the function for this particular type, filling in all the blanks.
+//@ In this case, the call to `T::min` will become a call to our implementation *statically*. There
+//@ is no dynamic dispatch, like there would be for Java interface methods or C++ `virtual` methods.
+//@ This behavior is similar to C++ templates. The optimizer (Rust is using LLVM) then has all the
+//@ information it could want to, e.g., inline function calls.
+
+// ## Trait implementations
+// To make `vec_min` usable with a `Vec<i32>`, we implement the `Minimum` trait for `i32`.