X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/rust-101.git/blobdiff_plain/a0585e3d40ed28824c711c5bc4d89b89ebc79a84..1d818fdb0201c5e7baaa1de6b05f38905c55008f:/src/part05.rs diff --git a/src/part05.rs b/src/part05.rs index 6abfe0c..7ad8754 100644 --- a/src/part05.rs +++ b/src/part05.rs @@ -6,7 +6,7 @@ //@ In the course of the next few parts, we are going to build a data-structure for computations //@ with *big* numbers. We would like to not have an upper bound to how large these numbers can //@ get, with the memory of the machine being the only limit. -//@ +//@ //@ We start by deciding how to represent such big numbers. One possibility here is to use a vector //@ "digits" of the number. This is like "1337" being a vector of four digits (1, 3, 3, 7), except //@ that we will use `u64` as type of our digits, meaning we have 2^64 individual digits. Now we @@ -146,9 +146,11 @@ fn work_on_variant(mut var: Variant, text: String) { //@ (Technically, the first field of a `String` is a pointer to its character data, so by //@ overwriting that pointer with an integer, we make it a completely invalid address. When the //@ destructor of `var` runs, it would try to deallocate that address, and Rust would eat your -//@ laundry - or whatever.) I hope this example clarifies why Rust has to rule out mutation in the -//@ presence of aliasing *in general*, not just for the specific case of a buffer being -//@ reallocated, and old pointers becoming hence invalid. +//@ laundry - or whatever.) +//@ +//@ I hope this example clarifies why Rust has to rule out mutation in the presence of aliasing +//@ *in general*, not just for the specific case of a buffer being reallocated, and old pointers +//@ becoming hence invalid. //@ [index](main.html) | [previous](part04.html) | [raw source](workspace/src/part05.rs) | //@ [next](part06.html)