-//@ Besides `Mutex`, there's also [`RwLock`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/sync/struct.RwLock.html), which
-//@ provides two ways of locking: One that grants only read-only access, to any number of concurrent readers, and another one
-//@ for exclusive write access. Notice that this is the same pattern we already saw with shared vs. mutable references. Hence
-//@ another way of explaining `RwLock` is to say that it is like `RefCell`, but works even for concurrent access. Rather than
-//@ panicking when the data is already borrowed, `RwLock` will of course block the current thread until the lock is available.
-//@ In this view, `Mutex` is a stripped-down version of `RwLock` that does not distinguish readers and writers.
-
-// **Exercise 15.3**: Change the code above to use `RwLock`, such that multiple calls to `get` can be executed at the same time.
+//@ Besides `Mutex`, there's also
+//@ [`RwLock`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/sync/struct.RwLock.html), which provides two
+//@ ways of locking: One that grants only read-only access, to any number of concurrent readers,
+//@ and another one for exclusive write access. Notice that this is the same pattern we already
+//@ saw with shared vs. mutable references. Hence another way of explaining `RwLock` is to say that
+//@ it is like `RefCell`, but works even for concurrent access. Rather than panicking when the data
+//@ is already borrowed, `RwLock` will of course block the current thread until the lock is
+//@ available. In this view, `Mutex` is a stripped-down version of `RwLock` that does not
+//@ distinguish readers and writers.
+
+// **Exercise 15.3**: Change the code above to use `RwLock`, such that multiple calls to `get` can
+// be executed at the same time.