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[refs]

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@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ refs/heads/snap-stage3: 78a7676898d9f80ab540c6df5d4c9ce35bb50463
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refs/heads/try: 519addf6277dbafccbb4159db4b710c37eaa2ec5
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refs/tags/release-0.1: 1f5c5126e96c79d22cb7862f75304136e204f105
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refs/heads/ndm: f3868061cd7988080c30d6d5bf352a5a5fe2460b
8-
refs/heads/try2: 600507d5380ca7d6d5536fabc2d4aca400c21bb9
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refs/heads/try2: ceb29314a7e6fc2d9f3527e36534b2d1608394d8
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refs/heads/dist-snap: ba4081a5a8573875fed17545846f6f6902c8ba8d
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refs/tags/release-0.2: c870d2dffb391e14efb05aa27898f1f6333a9596
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refs/tags/release-0.3: b5f0d0f648d9a6153664837026ba1be43d3e2503

branches/try2/LICENSE-MIT

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@@ -1,4 +1,5 @@
1-
Copyright (c) 2014 The Rust Project Developers
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Copyright (c) 2006-2009 Graydon Hoare
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Copyright (c) 2009-2014 Mozilla Foundation
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any
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person obtaining a copy of this software and associated

branches/try2/README.md

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@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ documentation.
2020
## Building from Source
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1. Make sure you have installed the dependencies:
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* `g++` 4.7 or `clang++` 3.x
23+
* `g++` 4.4 or `clang++` 3.x
2424
* `python` 2.6 or later (but not 3.x)
2525
* `perl` 5.0 or later
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* GNU `make` 3.81 or later

branches/try2/mk/crates.mk

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@@ -51,7 +51,7 @@
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TARGET_CRATES := libc std green rustuv native flate arena glob term semver \
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uuid serialize sync getopts collections num test time rand \
54-
workcache url log regex graphviz
54+
workcache url log regex
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HOST_CRATES := syntax rustc rustdoc fourcc hexfloat regex_macros
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CRATES := $(TARGET_CRATES) $(HOST_CRATES)
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TOOLS := compiletest rustdoc rustc
@@ -67,7 +67,6 @@ DEPS_rustdoc := rustc native:sundown serialize sync getopts collections \
6767
test time
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DEPS_flate := std native:miniz
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DEPS_arena := std collections
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DEPS_graphviz := std
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DEPS_glob := std
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DEPS_serialize := std collections log
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DEPS_term := std collections

branches/try2/src/doc/guide-pointers.md

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@@ -186,7 +186,7 @@ enum List<T> {
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Nil,
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Cons(T, ~List<T>),
188188
}
189-
189+
190190
fn main() {
191191
let list: List<int> = Cons(1, ~Cons(2, ~Cons(3, ~Nil)));
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println!("{:?}", list);
@@ -251,7 +251,7 @@ struct.
251251

252252
> **Note**: the `@` form of managed pointers is deprecated and behind a
253253
> feature gate (it requires a `#![feature(managed_pointers)]` attribute on
254-
> the crate root). There are replacements, currently
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> the crate root; remember the semicolon!). There are replacements, currently
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> there is `std::rc::Rc` and `std::gc::Gc` for shared ownership via reference
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> counting and garbage collection respectively.
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@@ -266,7 +266,7 @@ struct Point {
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x: int,
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y: int,
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}
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fn main() {
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let a = ~Point { x: 10, y: 20 };
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let b = a;
@@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ struct Point {
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x: int,
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y: int,
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}
300-
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fn main() {
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let a = @Point { x: 10, y: 20 };
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let b = a;
@@ -361,7 +361,7 @@ So how is this hard? Well, because we're ignoring ownership, the compiler needs
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to take great care to make sure that everything is safe. Despite their complete
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safety, a reference's representation at runtime is the same as that of
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an ordinary pointer in a C program. They introduce zero overhead. The compiler
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does all safety checks at compile time.
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does all safety checks at compile time.
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This theory is called 'region pointers,' and involve a concept called
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'lifetimes'. Here's the simple explanation: would you expect this code to
@@ -477,7 +477,7 @@ fn main() {
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You may think that this gives us terrible performance: return a value and then
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immediately box it up?!?! Isn't that the worst of both worlds? Rust is smarter
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than that. There is no copy in this code. `main` allocates enough room for the
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`@int`, passes a pointer to that memory into `foo` as `x`, and then `foo` writes
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`@int`, passes a pointer to that memory into `foo` as `x`, and then `foo` writes
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the value straight into that pointer. This writes the return value directly into
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the allocated box.
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branches/try2/src/doc/guide-tasks.md

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@@ -48,7 +48,13 @@ concurrency at this writing:
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* [`std::task`] - All code relating to tasks and task scheduling,
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* [`std::comm`] - The message passing interface,
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* [`sync::DuplexStream`] - An extension of `pipes::stream` that allows both sending and receiving,
51+
* [`sync::SyncSender`] - An extension of `pipes::stream` that provides synchronous message sending,
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* [`sync::SyncReceiver`] - An extension of `pipes::stream` that acknowledges each message received,
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* [`sync::rendezvous`] - Creates a stream whose channel, upon sending a message, blocks until the
54+
message is received.
5155
* [`sync::Arc`] - The Arc (atomically reference counted) type, for safely sharing immutable data,
56+
* [`sync::RWArc`] - A dual-mode Arc protected by a reader-writer lock,
57+
* [`sync::MutexArc`] - An Arc with mutable data protected by a blocking mutex,
5258
* [`sync::Semaphore`] - A counting, blocking, bounded-waiting semaphore,
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* [`sync::Mutex`] - A blocking, bounded-waiting, mutual exclusion lock with an associated
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FIFO condition variable,
@@ -64,8 +70,13 @@ concurrency at this writing:
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[`std::task`]: std/task/index.html
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[`std::comm`]: std/comm/index.html
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[`sync::DuplexStream`]: sync/struct.DuplexStream.html
73+
[`sync::SyncSender`]: sync/struct.SyncSender.html
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[`sync::SyncReceiver`]: sync/struct.SyncReceiver.html
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[`sync::rendezvous`]: sync/fn.rendezvous.html
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[`sync::Arc`]: sync/struct.Arc.html
68-
[`sync::Semaphore`]: sync/raw/struct.Semaphore.html
77+
[`sync::RWArc`]: sync/struct.RWArc.html
78+
[`sync::MutexArc`]: sync/struct.MutexArc.html
79+
[`sync::Semaphore`]: sync/struct.Semaphore.html
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[`sync::Mutex`]: sync/struct.Mutex.html
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[`sync::RWLock`]: sync/struct.RWLock.html
7182
[`sync::Barrier`]: sync/struct.Barrier.html
@@ -90,8 +101,6 @@ fn print_message() { println!("I am running in a different task!"); }
90101
spawn(print_message);
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92103
// Print something more profound in a different task using a lambda expression
93-
// This uses the proc() keyword to assign to spawn a function with no name
94-
// That function will call println!(...) as requested
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spawn(proc() println!("I am also running in a different task!") );
96105
~~~~
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branches/try2/src/doc/tutorial.md

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@@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ supported build environments that are most likely to work.
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To build from source you will also need the following prerequisite
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packages:
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93-
* g++ 4.7 or clang++ 3.x
93+
* g++ 4.4 or clang++ 3.x
9494
* python 2.6 or later (but not 3.x)
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* perl 5.0 or later
9696
* gnu make 3.81 or later
@@ -468,16 +468,19 @@ Unlike in C, there is no "falling through" between arms: only one arm
468468
executes, and it doesn't have to explicitly `break` out of the
469469
construct when it is finished.
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471-
A `match` arm consists of a *pattern*, then a fat arrow `=>`, followed
472-
by an *action* (expression). Each case is separated by commas. It is
473-
often convenient to use a block expression for each case, in which case
474-
the commas are optional as shown below. Literals are valid patterns and
475-
match only their own value. A single arm may match multiple different
476-
patterns by combining them with the pipe operator (`|`), so long as every
477-
pattern binds the same set of variables. Ranges of numeric literal
478-
patterns can be expressed with two dots, as in `M..N`. The underscore
479-
(`_`) is a wildcard pattern that matches any single value. (`..`) is a
480-
different wildcard that can match one or more fields in an `enum` variant.
471+
A `match` arm consists of a *pattern*, then an arrow `=>`, followed by
472+
an *action* (expression). Literals are valid patterns and match only
473+
their own value. A single arm may match multiple different patterns by
474+
combining them with the pipe operator (`|`), so long as every pattern
475+
binds the same set of variables. Ranges of numeric literal patterns
476+
can be expressed with two dots, as in `M..N`. The underscore (`_`) is
477+
a wildcard pattern that matches any single value. (`..`) is a different
478+
wildcard that can match one or more fields in an `enum` variant.
479+
480+
The patterns in a match arm are followed by a fat arrow, `=>`, then an
481+
expression to evaluate. Each case is separated by commas. It's often
482+
convenient to use a block expression for each case, in which case the
483+
commas are optional.
481484

482485
~~~
483486
# let my_number = 1;
@@ -1413,7 +1416,7 @@ contains a point, but allocated in a different location:
14131416
14141417
~~~
14151418
# struct Point { x: f64, y: f64 }
1416-
let on_the_stack : Point = Point { x: 3.0, y: 4.0 };
1419+
let on_the_stack : Point = Point { x: 3.0, y: 4.0 };
14171420
let owned_box : ~Point = ~Point { x: 7.0, y: 9.0 };
14181421
~~~
14191422
@@ -1717,103 +1720,38 @@ environment (sometimes referred to as "capturing" variables in their
17171720
environment). For example, you couldn't write the following:
17181721
17191722
~~~~ {.ignore}
1720-
let x = 3;
1723+
let foo = 10;
17211724
1722-
// `fun` cannot refer to `x`
1723-
fn fun() -> () { println!("{}", x); }
1725+
fn bar() -> int {
1726+
return foo; // `bar` cannot refer to `foo`
1727+
}
17241728
~~~~
17251729
1726-
A _closure_ does support accessing the enclosing scope; below we will create
1727-
2 _closures_ (nameless functions). Compare how `||` replaces `()` and how
1728-
they try to access `x`:
1729-
1730-
~~~~ {.ignore}
1731-
let x = 3;
1730+
Rust also supports _closures_, functions that can access variables in
1731+
the enclosing scope.
17321732
1733-
// `fun` is an invalid definition
1734-
fn fun () -> () { println!("{}", x) } // cannot capture from enclosing scope
1735-
let closure = || -> () { println!("{}", x) }; // can capture from enclosing scope
1736-
1737-
// `fun_arg` is an invalid definition
1738-
fn fun_arg (arg: int) -> () { println!("{}", arg + x) } // cannot capture
1739-
let closure_arg = |arg: int| -> () { println!("{}", arg + x) }; // can capture
1740-
// ^
1741-
// Requires a type because the implementation needs to know which `+` to use.
1742-
// In the future, the implementation may not need the help.
1733+
~~~~
1734+
fn call_closure_with_ten(b: |int|) { b(10); }
17431735
1744-
fun(); // Still won't work
1745-
closure(); // Prints: 3
1736+
let captured_var = 20;
1737+
let closure = |arg| println!("captured_var={}, arg={}", captured_var, arg);
17461738
1747-
fun_arg(7); // Still won't work
1748-
closure_arg(7); // Prints: 10
1739+
call_closure_with_ten(closure);
17491740
~~~~
17501741
17511742
Closures begin with the argument list between vertical bars and are followed by
17521743
a single expression. Remember that a block, `{ <expr1>; <expr2>; ... }`, is
17531744
considered a single expression: it evaluates to the result of the last
17541745
expression it contains if that expression is not followed by a semicolon,
1755-
otherwise the block evaluates to `()`, the unit value.
1756-
1757-
In general, return types and all argument types must be specified
1758-
explicitly for function definitions. (As previously mentioned in the
1759-
[Functions section](#functions), omitting the return type from a
1760-
function declaration is synonymous with an explicit declaration of
1761-
return type unit, `()`.)
1746+
otherwise the block evaluates to `()`.
17621747
1763-
~~~~ {.ignore}
1764-
fn fun (x: int) { println!("{}", x) } // this is same as saying `-> ()`
1765-
fn square(x: int) -> uint { (x * x) as uint } // other return types are explicit
1748+
The types of the arguments are generally omitted, as is the return type,
1749+
because the compiler can almost always infer them. In the rare case where the
1750+
compiler needs assistance, though, the arguments and return types may be
1751+
annotated.
17661752
1767-
// Error: mismatched types: expected `()` but found `uint`
1768-
fn badfun(x: int) { (x * x) as uint }
17691753
~~~~
1770-
1771-
On the other hand, the compiler can usually infer both the argument
1772-
and return types for a closure expression; therefore they are often
1773-
omitted, since both a human reader and the compiler can deduce the
1774-
types from the immediate context. This is in contrast to function
1775-
declarations, which require types to be specified and are not subject
1776-
to type inference. Compare:
1777-
1778-
~~~~ {.ignore}
1779-
// `fun` as a function declaration cannot infer the type of `x`, so it must be provided
1780-
fn fun (x: int) { println!("{}", x) }
1781-
let closure = |x | { println!("{}", x) }; // infers `x: int`, return type `()`
1782-
1783-
// For closures, omitting a return type is *not* synonymous with `-> ()`
1784-
let add_3 = |y | { 3i + y }; // infers `y: int`, return type `int`.
1785-
1786-
fun(10); // Prints 10
1787-
closure(20); // Prints 20
1788-
closure(add_3(30)); // Prints 33
1789-
1790-
fun("String"); // Error: mismatched types
1791-
1792-
// Error: mismatched types
1793-
// inference already assigned `closure` the type `|int| -> ()`
1794-
closure("String");
1795-
~~~~
1796-
1797-
In cases where the compiler needs assistance, the arguments and return
1798-
types may be annotated on closures, using the same notation as shown
1799-
earlier. In the example below, since different types provide an
1800-
implementation for the operator `*`, the argument type for the `x`
1801-
parameter must be explicitly provided.
1802-
1803-
~~~~{.ignore}
1804-
// Error: the type of `x` must be known to be used with `x * x`
1805-
let square = |x | -> uint { (x * x) as uint };
1806-
~~~~
1807-
1808-
In the corrected version, the argument type is explicitly annotated,
1809-
while the return type can still be inferred.
1810-
1811-
~~~~
1812-
let square_explicit = |x: int| -> uint { (x * x) as uint };
1813-
let square_infer = |x: int| { (x * x) as uint };
1814-
1815-
println!("{}", square_explicit(20)); // 400
1816-
println!("{}", square_infer(-20)); // 400
1754+
let square = |x: int| -> uint { (x * x) as uint };
18171755
~~~~
18181756
18191757
There are several forms of closure, each with its own role. The most
@@ -2584,18 +2522,11 @@ for `Eq` and can be used with the equality operators, and that a value
25842522
of type `ABC` can be randomly generated and converted to a string:
25852523

25862524
~~~
2587-
extern crate rand;
2588-
25892525
#[deriving(Eq)]
25902526
struct Circle { radius: f64 }
25912527
2592-
#[deriving(Rand, Show)]
2528+
#[deriving(Clone, Show)]
25932529
enum ABC { A, B, C }
2594-
2595-
fn main() {
2596-
// Use the Show trait to print "A, B, C."
2597-
println!("{}, {}, {}", A, B, C);
2598-
}
25992530
~~~
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26012532
The full list of derivable traits is `Eq`, `TotalEq`, `Ord`,

branches/try2/src/etc/emacs/README.md

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@@ -12,12 +12,11 @@ To install manually, check out this repository and add this to your
1212

1313
```lisp
1414
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/rust-mode/")
15-
(autoload 'rust-mode "rust-mode" nil t)
16-
(add-to-list 'auto-mode-alist '("\\.rs\\'" . rust-mode))
15+
(require 'rust-mode)
1716
```
1817

19-
This associates `rust-mode` with `.rs` files. To enable it explicitly, do
20-
<kbd>M-x rust-mode</kbd>.
18+
`rust-mode` will automatically be associated with `.rs` files. To enable it
19+
explicitly, do <kbd>M-x rust-mode</kbd>.
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2221
### `package.el` installation via Marmalade or MELPA
2322

branches/try2/src/etc/emacs/rust-mode.el

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@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@
169169
;; Font-locking definitions and helpers
170170
(defconst rust-mode-keywords
171171
'("as"
172-
"box" "break"
172+
"break"
173173
"continue" "crate"
174174
"do"
175175
"else" "enum" "extern"

branches/try2/src/libarena/lib.rs

Lines changed: 2 additions & 2 deletions
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@@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ mod tests {
517517
#[bench]
518518
pub fn bench_copy_nonarena(b: &mut Bencher) {
519519
b.iter(|| {
520-
box Point {
520+
~Point {
521521
x: 1,
522522
y: 2,
523523
z: 3,
@@ -569,7 +569,7 @@ mod tests {
569569
#[bench]
570570
pub fn bench_noncopy_nonarena(b: &mut Bencher) {
571571
b.iter(|| {
572-
box Noncopy {
572+
~Noncopy {
573573
string: "hello world".to_owned(),
574574
array: vec!( 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ),
575575
}

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