X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/6b347ac8c0f8710bd0ca42d20d32511fcb53f188..306776311fd5ec57a462ea227c40ba0acb2fec73:/src/part14.rs?ds=inline diff --git a/src/part14.rs b/src/part14.rs index 2105838..45044af 100644 --- a/src/part14.rs +++ b/src/part14.rs @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ pub mod rgrep { // We also import some other pieces that we will need. extern crate docopt; use self::docopt::Docopt; - use part12::{run, Options, OutputMode}; + use part13::{run, Options, OutputMode}; use std::process; // The `USAGE` string documents how the program is to be called. It's written in a format that `docopt` can parse. @@ -131,8 +131,8 @@ Options: //@ encoded string, that is, a bunch of bytes in memory (`[u8]`) that are valid according of UTF-8. `str` is unsized. `&str` //@ stores the address of the character data, and their length. String literals like "this one" are //@ of type `&'static str`: They point right to the constant section of the binary, so - //@ However, the borrow is valid for as long as the program runs, hence it has lifetime `'static`. Calling - //@ `to_string` will copy the string data into an owned buffer on the heap, and thus convert it to `String`. + //@ the borrow is valid for the entire program. The bytes pointed to by `pattern`, on the other hand, are owned by someone else, + //@ and we call `to_string` on it to copy the string data into a buffer on the heap that we own. let mode = if count { OutputMode::Count } else if sort { @@ -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) | [next](part15.html) +//@ [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)