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Rust For Systems Programmers

A Rust tutorial for experienced C and C++ programmers.

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This tutorial is intended for programmers who already know how pointers and references work and are used to systems programming concepts such as integer widths and memory management. We intend to cover, primarily, the differences between Rust and C++ to get you writing Rust programs quickly without lots of fluff you probably already know.

Hopefully, Rust is a pretty intuitive language for C++ programmers. Most of the syntax is pretty similar. The big difference (in my experience) is that the sometimes vague concepts of good systems programming are strictly enforced by the compiler. This can be infuriating at first - there are things you want to do, but the compiler won't let you (at least in safe code), and sometimes these things are safe, but you can't convince the compiler of that. However, you'll quickly develop a good intuition for what is allowed. Communicating your own notions of memory safety to the compiler requires some new and sometimes complicated type annotations. But if you have a strong idea of lifetimes for your objects and experience with generic programming, they shouldn't be too tough to learn.

This tutorial started as a series of blog posts. Partly as an aid for me (@nrc) learning Rust (there is no better way to check that you have learnt something than to try and explain it to somebody else) and partly because I found the existing resources for learning Rust unsatisfactory - they spent too much time on the basics that I already knew and used higher level intuitions to describe concepts that could better be explained to me using lower level intuitions. Since then, the documentation for Rust has got much better, but I still think that existing C++ programmers are an audience who are a natural target for Rust, but are not particularly well catered for.

Contents

  1. Introduction - Hello world!
  2. Control flow
  3. Primitive types and operators
  4. Unique pointers
  5. Borrowed pointers
  6. Rc and raw pointers
  7. Data types
  8. Destructuring pt 1
  9. Destructuring pt 2
  10. Arrays and vecs
  11. Graphs and arena allocation
  12. Closures and first-class functions

Other resources

  • The Rust book/guide - the best place for learning Rust in general and probably the best place to go for a second opinion on stuff here or for stuff not covered.
  • Rust API documentation - detailed documentation for the Rust libraries.
  • The Rust reference manual - a little out of date in places, but thorough; good for looking up details.
  • Discuss forum - general forum for discussion or questions about using and learning Rust.
  • #rust irc channel - probably the best place to get quick answers to your Rust questions if you like irc.
  • StackOverflow Rust questions - answers to many beginner and advanced questions about Rust, but be careful though - Rust has changed a lot over the years and some of the answers might be very out of date.

Contributing

Yes please!

If you spot a typo or mistake, please submit a PR, don't be shy! Please feel free to file an issue for larger changes or for new chapters you'd like to see. I'd also be happy to see re-organisation of existing work or expanded examples, if you feel the tutorial could be improved in those ways.

If you'd like to contribute a paragraph, section, or chapter please do! If you want ideas for things to cover, see the list of issues, in particular those tagged new material. If you're not sure of something, please get in touch by pinging me here (@nrc) or on irc (nrc, on #rust or #rust-internals).

Style

Obviously, the intended audience is C++ programmers. The tutorial should concentrate on things that will be new to experienced C++ programmers, rather than a general audience (although, I don't assume the audience is familiar with the most recent versions of C++). I'd like to avoid too much basic material and definitely avoid too much overlap with other resources, in particular the Rust guide/book.

Work on edge case use cases (e.g., using a different build system from Cargo, or writing syntax extensions, using unstable APIs) is definitely welcome, as is in-depth work on topics already covered at a high level.

I'd like to avoid recipe-style examples for converting C++ code to Rust code, but small examples of this kind are OK.

Use of different formats (e.g., question and answer/FAQs, or larger worked examples) are welcome.

I don't plan on adding exercises or suggestions for mini-projects, but if you're interested in that, let me know.

I'm aiming for a fairly academic tone, but not too dry. All writing should be in English (British English, not American English; although I would be very happy to have localisations/translations into any language, including American English) and be valid GitHub markdown. For advice on writing style, grammar, punctuation, etc. see the Oxford Style Manual or The Economist Style Guide. Please limit width to 80 columns. I am a fan of the Oxford comma.

Don't feel like work has to be perfect to be submitted, I'm happy to edit and I'm sure other people will be in the future.

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