Book Image

Rust Programming Cookbook

By : Claus Matzinger
Book Image

Rust Programming Cookbook

By: Claus Matzinger

Overview of this book

Rust 2018, Rust's first major milestone since version 1.0, brings more advancement in the Rust language. The Rust Programming Cookbook is a practical guide to help you overcome challenges when writing Rust code. This Rust book covers recipes for configuring Rust for different environments and architectural designs, and provides solutions to practical problems. It will also take you through Rust's core concepts, enabling you to create efficient, high-performance applications that use features such as zero-cost abstractions and improved memory management. As you progress, you'll delve into more advanced topics, including channels and actors, for building scalable, production-grade applications, and even get to grips with error handling, macros, and modularization to write maintainable code. You will then learn how to overcome common roadblocks when using Rust for systems programming, IoT, web development, and network programming. Finally, you'll discover what Rust 2018 has to offer for embedded programmers. By the end of the book, you'll have learned how to build fast and safe applications and services using Rust.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)

Expressing Yourself with Macros

In the previous century, many languages featured a preprocessor (most prominently, C/C++) that often did unassuming text replacement. While this is handy for expressing constants (#define MYCONST 1), it also leads to potentially unexpected outcomes once the replacement gets more complex (for example, #define MYCONST 1 + 1 and when applied as 5 * MYCONST yields 5 * 1 + 1 = 6 instead of the expected 10 (from 5 * (1 + 1)) ) .

However, a preprocessor allows program programming (metaprogramming) and therefore makes things easier for the developer. Instead of copying and pasting expressions and excessive boilerplate code, a quick macro definition leads to a smaller code base and reusable calls and—as a consequence—fewer errors. In order to make the best use of Rust's type system, macros cannot simply search and replace text; they have...