X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/7b5af93d756464638204b0b703485712d88d3656..c25f3400060ea1a02f8fa9de69c39fd7b020e8a5:/src/part02.rs diff --git a/src/part02.rs b/src/part02.rs index 41bb3bc..bd8abf0 100644 --- a/src/part02.rs +++ b/src/part02.rs @@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ fn call_constructor(x: i32) -> SomethingOrNothing { //@ So, as a first step towards a generic `vec_min`, we define a `Minimum` trait. //@ For now, just ignore the `Copy`, we will come back to this point later. //@ A `trait` is a lot like interfaces in Java: You define a bunch of functions -//@ you want to have implemented, and their argument and return types.
+//@ you want to have implemented, and their argument and return types.
//@ The function `min` takes to arguments of the same type, but I made the //@ first argument the special `self` argument. I could, alternatively, have //@ made `min` a static function as follows: `fn min(a: Self, b: Self) -> Self`. @@ -79,7 +79,7 @@ pub trait Minimum : Copy { //@ //@ There is a crucial difference to templates in C++: We actually have to declare which traits //@ we want the type to satisfy. If we left away the `Minimum`, Rust would have complained that -//@ we cannot call `min`. Just try it!
+//@ we cannot call `min`. Just try it!
//@ This is in strong contrast to C++, where the compiler only checks such details when the //@ function is actually used. pub fn vec_min(v: Vec) -> SomethingOrNothing {