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[refs]

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---
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refs/heads/master: 09abbbdafc08654b78c8529c1a0c03d628bb2d91
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refs/heads/master: b865c1f28ca2459b27c1ac83829aa45085f1b50e
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refs/heads/snap-stage1: e33de59e47c5076a89eadeb38f4934f58a3618a6
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refs/heads/snap-stage3: 6faa4f33a42de32579e02a8d030db920d360e2b5
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refs/heads/try: a2473a89da106f7dd3be86e9d52fe23f43d5bfa5

trunk/Makefile.in

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@@ -65,7 +65,6 @@
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#
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# * `VERBOSE=1` - Print all commands. Use this to see what's going on.
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# * `RUSTFLAGS=...` - Add compiler flags to all `rustc` invocations
68-
# * `JEMALLOC_FLAGS=...` - Pass flags to jemalloc's configure script
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#
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# * `TESTNAME=...` - Specify the name of tests to run
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# * `CHECK_IGNORED=1` - Run normally-ignored tests

trunk/README.md

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@@ -101,18 +101,6 @@ There is a lot more documentation in the [wiki].
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[wiki]: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/wiki
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104-
## Getting help and getting involved
105-
106-
The Rust community congregates in a few places:
107-
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* [StackOverflow] - Get help here.
109-
* [/r/rust] - General discussion.
110-
* [discuss.rust-lang.org] - For development of the Rust language itself.
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[StackOverflow]: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/rust
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[/r/rust]: http://reddit.com/r/rust
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[discuss.rust-lang.org]: http://discuss.rust-lang.org/
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## License
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Rust is primarily distributed under the terms of both the MIT license

trunk/configure

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@@ -707,7 +707,7 @@ then
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| cut -d ' ' -f 2)
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case $CFG_CLANG_VERSION in
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(3.0svn | 3.0 | 3.1* | 3.2* | 3.3* | 3.4* | 3.5* | 3.6*)
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(3.0svn | 3.0 | 3.1* | 3.2* | 3.3* | 3.4* | 3.5* )
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step_msg "found ok version of CLANG: $CFG_CLANG_VERSION"
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if [ -z "$CC" ]
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then

trunk/mk/dist.mk

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@@ -112,7 +112,7 @@ distcheck-tar-src: dist-tar-src
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ifdef CFG_ISCC
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PKG_EXE = dist/$(PKG_NAME)-$(CFG_BUILD).exe
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PKG_EXE = dist/$(PKG_NAME)-install.exe
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%.iss: $(S)src/etc/pkg/%.iss
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cp $< $@
@@ -123,7 +123,7 @@ PKG_EXE = dist/$(PKG_NAME)-$(CFG_BUILD).exe
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$(PKG_EXE): rust.iss modpath.iss upgrade.iss LICENSE.txt rust-logo.ico \
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$(CSREQ3_T_$(CFG_BUILD)_H_$(CFG_BUILD)) \
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dist-prepare-win
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$(CFG_PYTHON) $(S)src/etc/copy-runtime-deps.py tmp/dist/win/bin $(CFG_BUILD)
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$(CFG_PYTHON) $(S)src/etc/copy-runtime-deps.py tmp/dist/win/bin
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@$(call E, ISCC: $@)
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$(Q)"$(CFG_ISCC)" $<
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trunk/mk/main.mk

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CFG_RUSTC_FLAGS := $(RUSTFLAGS)
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CFG_GCCISH_CFLAGS :=
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CFG_GCCISH_LINK_FLAGS :=
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CFG_JEMALLOC_FLAGS :=
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ifdef CFG_DISABLE_OPTIMIZE
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$(info cfg: disabling rustc optimization (CFG_DISABLE_OPTIMIZE))
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CFG_RUSTC_FLAGS +=
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CFG_JEMALLOC_FLAGS += --enable-debug
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else
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# The rtopt cfg turns off runtime sanity checks
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CFG_RUSTC_FLAGS += -O --cfg rtopt
102100
endif
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CFG_JEMALLOC_FLAGS += $(JEMALLOC_FLAGS)
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ifdef CFG_DISABLE_DEBUG
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CFG_RUSTC_FLAGS += --cfg ndebug
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CFG_GCCISH_CFLAGS += -DRUST_NDEBUG

trunk/mk/reconfig.mk

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@@ -15,11 +15,7 @@ rwildcard=$(foreach d,$(wildcard $1*),$(call rwildcard,$d/,$2) \
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ifndef CFG_DISABLE_MANAGE_SUBMODULES
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# This is a pretty expensive operation but I don't see any way to avoid it
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# NB: This only looks for '+' status (wrong commit checked out), not '-' status
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# (nothing checked out at all). `./configure --{llvm,jemalloc,libuv}-root`
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# will explicitly deinitialize the corresponding submodules, and we don't
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# want to force constant rebuilds in that case.
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NEED_GIT_RECONFIG=$(shell cd "$(CFG_SRC_DIR)" && "$(CFG_GIT)" submodule status | grep -c '^+')
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NEED_GIT_RECONFIG=$(shell cd "$(CFG_SRC_DIR)" && "$(CFG_GIT)" submodule status | grep -c '^\(+\|-\)')
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else
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NEED_GIT_RECONFIG=0
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endif

trunk/mk/rt.mk

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@@ -301,7 +301,7 @@ JEMALLOC_LOCAL_$(1) := $$(JEMALLOC_BUILD_DIR_$(1))/lib/$$(JEMALLOC_REAL_NAME_$(1
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$$(JEMALLOC_LOCAL_$(1)): $$(JEMALLOC_DEPS) $$(MKFILE_DEPS)
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@$$(call E, make: jemalloc)
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cd "$$(JEMALLOC_BUILD_DIR_$(1))"; "$(S)src/jemalloc/configure" \
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$$(JEMALLOC_ARGS_$(1)) --with-jemalloc-prefix=je_ $(CFG_JEMALLOC_FLAGS) \
304+
$$(JEMALLOC_ARGS_$(1)) --with-jemalloc-prefix=je_ \
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--build=$(CFG_BUILD) --host=$(1) \
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CC="$$(CC_$(1))" \
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AR="$$(AR_$(1))" \

trunk/src/doc/guide-strings.md

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```
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If you have good reason. It's not polite to hold on to ownership you don't
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need, and it can make your lifetimes more complex.
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## Generic functions
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To write a function that's generic over types of strings, use [the `Str`
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trait](http://doc.rust-lang.org/std/str/trait.Str.html):
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```{rust}
103-
fn some_string_length<T: Str>(x: T) -> uint {
104-
x.as_slice().len()
105-
}
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fn main() {
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let s = "Hello, world";
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println!("{}", some_string_length(s));
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let s = "Hello, world".to_string();
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println!("{}", some_string_length(s));
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}
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```
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Both of these lines will print `12`.
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The only method that the `Str` trait has is `as_slice()`, which gives you
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access to a `&str` value from the underlying string.
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need, and it can make your lifetimes more complex. Furthermore, you can pass
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either kind of string into `foo` by using `.as_slice()` on any `String` you
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need to pass in, so the `&str` version is more flexible.
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## Comparisons
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@@ -145,65 +121,6 @@ fn compare(string: String) {
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Converting a `String` to a `&str` is cheap, but converting the `&str` to a
146122
`String` involves an allocation.
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148-
## Indexing strings
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You may be tempted to try to access a certain character of a `String`, like
151-
this:
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```{rust,ignore}
154-
let s = "hello".to_string();
155-
156-
println!("{}", s[0]);
157-
```
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This does not compile. This is on purpose. In the world of UTF-8, direct
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indexing is basically never what you want to do. The reason is that each
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character can be a variable number of bytes. This means that you have to iterate
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through the characters anyway, which is a O(n) operation.
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To iterate over a string, use the `graphemes()` method on `&str`:
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```{rust}
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let s = "αἰθήρ";
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for l in s.graphemes(true) {
170-
println!("{}", l);
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}
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```
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Note that `l` has the type `&str` here, since a single grapheme can consist of
175-
multiple codepoints, so a `char` wouldn't be appropriate.
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This will print out each character in turn, as you'd expect: first "α", then
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"ἰ", etc. You can see that this is different than just the individual bytes.
179-
Here's a version that prints out each byte:
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```{rust}
182-
let s = "αἰθήρ";
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for l in s.bytes() {
185-
println!("{}", l);
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}
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```
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This will print:
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```{notrust,ignore}
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206
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177
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225
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188
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206
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184
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206
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174
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129
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```
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Many more bytes than graphemes!
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# Other Documentation
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* [the `&str` API documentation](/std/str/index.html)

trunk/src/doc/guide.md

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@@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ in your file name, use an underscore. `hello_world.rs` versus `goodbye.rs`.
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Now that you've got your file open, type this in:
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```{rust}
153+
```
154154
fn main() {
155155
println!("Hello, world!");
156156
}
@@ -166,7 +166,7 @@ Hello, world!
166166

167167
Success! Let's go over what just happened in detail.
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```{rust}
169+
```
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fn main() {
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172172
}
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187187
Next up is this line:
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189-
```{rust}
189+
```
190190
println!("Hello, world!");
191191
```
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520520
Could not compile `hello_world`.
521521
```
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523-
Rust will not let us use a value that has not been initialized. Next, let's
524-
talk about this stuff we've added to `println!`.
523+
Rust will not let us use a value that has not been initialized. So why let us
524+
declare a binding without initializing it? You'd think our first example would
525+
have errored. Well, Rust is smarter than that. Before we get to that, let's talk
526+
about this stuff we've added to `println!`.
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526528
If you include two curly braces (`{}`, some call them moustaches...) in your
527529
string to print, Rust will interpret this as a request to interpolate some sort
@@ -536,6 +538,12 @@ format in a more detailed manner, there are a [wide number of options
536538
available](std/fmt/index.html). For now, we'll just stick to the default:
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integers aren't very complicated to print.
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541+
So, we've cleared up all of the confusion around bindings, with one exception:
542+
why does Rust let us declare a variable binding without an initial value if we
543+
must initialize the binding before we use it? And how does it know that we have
544+
or have not initialized the binding? For that, we need to learn our next
545+
concept: `if`.
546+
539547
# If
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541549
Rust's take on `if` is not particularly complex, but it's much more like the
@@ -562,7 +570,7 @@ the block is executed. If it's `false`, then it is not.
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563571
If you want something to happen in the `false` case, use an `else`:
564572

565-
```{rust}
573+
```
566574
let x = 5i;
567575
568576
if x == 5i {
@@ -575,7 +583,7 @@ if x == 5i {
575583
This is all pretty standard. However, you can also do this:
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577585

578-
```{rust}
586+
```
579587
let x = 5i;
580588
581589
let y = if x == 5i {
@@ -587,7 +595,7 @@ let y = if x == 5i {
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588596
Which we can (and probably should) write like this:
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590-
```{rust}
598+
```
591599
let x = 5i;
592600
593601
let y = if x == 5i { 10i } else { 15i };
@@ -644,7 +652,7 @@ every line of Rust code you see.
644652
What is this exception that makes us say 'almost?' You saw it already, in this
645653
code:
646654

647-
```{rust}
655+
```
648656
let x = 5i;
649657
650658
let y: int = if x == 5i { 10i } else { 15i };
@@ -990,7 +998,7 @@ notation: `origin.x`.
990998
The values in structs are immutable, like other bindings in Rust. However, you
991999
can use `mut` to make them mutable:
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993-
```{rust}
1001+
```rust
9941002
struct Point {
9951003
x: int,
9961004
y: int,
@@ -1014,7 +1022,7 @@ called a **tuple struct**. Tuple structs do have a name, but their fields
10141022
don't:
10151023

10161024

1017-
```{rust}
1025+
```
10181026
struct Color(int, int, int);
10191027
struct Point(int, int, int);
10201028
```
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10291037
It is almost always better to use a struct than a tuple struct. We would write
10301038
`Color` and `Point` like this instead:
10311039

1032-
```{rust}
1040+
```rust
10331041
struct Color {
10341042
red: int,
10351043
blue: int,
@@ -1050,7 +1058,7 @@ There _is_ one case when a tuple struct is very useful, though, and that's a
10501058
tuple struct with only one element. We call this a 'newtype,' because it lets
10511059
you create a new type that's a synonym for another one:
10521060

1053-
```{rust}
1061+
```
10541062
struct Inches(int);
10551063
10561064
let length = Inches(10);
@@ -1167,7 +1175,7 @@ what's the solution?
11671175
Rust has a keyword, `match`, that allows you to replace complicated `if`/`else`
11681176
groupings with something more powerful. Check it out:
11691177

1170-
```{rust}
1178+
```rust
11711179
let x = 5i;
11721180

11731181
match x {
@@ -1408,7 +1416,7 @@ We now loop forever with `loop`, and use `break` to break out early.
14081416
`continue` is similar, but instead of ending the loop, goes to the next
14091417
iteration: This will only print the odd numbers:
14101418

1411-
```{rust}
1419+
```
14121420
for x in range(0i, 10i) {
14131421
if x % 2 == 0 { continue; }
14141422
@@ -4123,7 +4131,7 @@ the ability to use this **method call syntax** via the `impl` keyword.
41234131

41244132
Here's how it works:
41254133

4126-
```{rust}
4134+
```
41274135
struct Circle {
41284136
x: f64,
41294137
y: f64,
@@ -4162,7 +4170,7 @@ multiplications later, and we have our area.
41624170
You can also define methods that do not take a `self` parameter. Here's a
41634171
pattern that's very common in Rust code:
41644172

4165-
```{rust}
4173+
```
41664174
struct Circle {
41674175
x: f64,
41684176
y: f64,

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