Explain the --bin flag in terms of the difference between shipping binary and library code I'm not sure if my explanation is even quite correct, but as a newbie coming from Ruby, this is my best guess. (In Rubyland, libraries always ship with the source code because there's no other form you can ship. :) ) |
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| complement-design-faq.md | ||
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| complement-project-faq.md | ||
| favicon.inc | ||
| footer.inc | ||
| full-toc.inc | ||
| grammar.md | ||
| guide-crates.md | ||
| guide-error-handling.md | ||
| guide-ffi.md | ||
| guide-macros.md | ||
| guide-ownership.md | ||
| guide-plugins.md | ||
| guide-pointers.md | ||
| guide-strings.md | ||
| guide-tasks.md | ||
| guide-testing.md | ||
| guide-unsafe.md | ||
| guide.md | ||
| index.md | ||
| intro.md | ||
| not_found.md | ||
| README.md | ||
| reference.md | ||
| rust.css | ||
| rust.md | ||
| rustdoc.md | ||
| tutorial.md | ||
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Rust documentations
Dependencies
Pandoc, a universal document converter, is required to generate docs as HTML from Rust's source code.
Building
To generate all the docs, just run make docs from the root of the repository.
This will convert the distributed Markdown docs to HTML and generate HTML doc
for the 'std' and 'extra' libraries.
To generate HTML documentation from one source file/crate, do something like:
rustdoc --output html-doc/ --output-format html ../src/libstd/path.rs
(This, of course, requires a working build of the rustdoc tool.)
Additional notes
To generate an HTML version of a doc from Markdown manually, you can do something like:
pandoc --from=markdown --to=html5 --number-sections -o reference.html reference.md
(reference.md being the Rust Reference Manual.)
The syntax for pandoc flavored markdown can be found at:
A nice quick reference (for non-pandoc markdown) is at: