Book Image

Creative Projects for Rust Programmers

By : Carlo Milanesi
Book Image

Creative Projects for Rust Programmers

By: Carlo Milanesi

Overview of this book

Rust is a community-built language that solves pain points present in many other languages, thus improving performance and safety. In this book, you will explore the latest features of Rust by building robust applications across different domains and platforms. The book gets you up and running with high-quality open source libraries and frameworks available in the Rust ecosystem that can help you to develop efficient applications with Rust. You'll learn how to build projects in domains such as data access, RESTful web services, web applications, 2D games for web and desktop, interpreters and compilers, emulators, and Linux Kernel modules. For each of these application types, you'll use frameworks such as Actix, Tera, Yew, Quicksilver, ggez, and nom. This book will not only help you to build on your knowledge of Rust but also help you to choose an appropriate framework for building your project. By the end of this Rust book, you will have learned how to build fast and safe applications with Rust and have the real-world experience you need to advance in your career.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Questions

  1. Why is it not a good idea to change programmatically a TOML file edited by a user?
  2. When is it better to use a dynamically typed parsing of TOML or JSON files and when is it better to use statically typed parsing?
  3. When is it required to derive a structure from the Serialize and the Deserialize trait?
  1. What is a pretty generation of a JSON string?
  2. Why could it be better to use a stream parser, rather than a single-call parser?
  3. When is SQLite a better choice and when is it better to use PostgreSQL?
  4. Which is the type of the parameters passed with a SQL command to a SQLite database manager?
  5. What does the query method do on a PostgreSQL database?
  6. What are the names of the functions to read and write values in a Redis key-value store?
  7. Can you try to write a program that gets an ID from the command line, queries SQLite, PostgreSQL, or the Redis database for the ID, and prints some information regarding the data found?