X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/63b7a79069a399c32d575bb71832fcad134117c9..793fb7fe9f77aa176f40e405a8b7c6814c454e46:/src/part14.rs?ds=inline diff --git a/src/part14.rs b/src/part14.rs index ae13e01..5c00905 100644 --- a/src/part14.rs +++ b/src/part14.rs @@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ pub fn sort(data: &mut [T]) { // Finally, we split our slice to sort the two halves. The nice part about slices is that splitting them is cheap: //@ They are just a pointer to a start address, and a length. We can thus get two pointers, one at the beginning and //@ one in the middle, and set the lengths appropriately such that they don't overlap. This is what `split_at_mut` does. - //@ Since the two slices don't overlap, there is no aliasing and we can have both of them as exclusive, mutable slices. + //@ Since the two slices don't overlap, there is no aliasing and we can have both of them as unique, mutable slices. let (part1, part2) = data.split_at_mut(lpos); //@ The index operation can not only be used to address certain elements, it can also be used for *slicing*: Giving a range //@ of indices, and obtaining an appropriate part of the slice we started with. Here, we remove the last element from @@ -159,4 +159,4 @@ Options: // the pattern to regular-expression mode, and change `filter_lines` to honor this option. The documentation of regex is available from its crates.io site. // (You won't be able to use the `regex!` macro if you are on the stable or beta channel of Rust. But it wouldn't help for our use-case anyway.) -//@ [index](main.html) | [previous](part13.html) | [raw source](https://www.ralfj.de/git/rust-101.git/blob_plain/HEAD:/workspace/src/part14.rs) | [next](part15.html) +//@ [index](main.html) | [previous](part13.html) | [raw source](workspace/src/part14.rs) | [next](part15.html)