Various coercion cleanups I think the commit order is the most reasonable one, but there's probably more ways to get to the same goal. Essentially I got rid of the `simple` and `identity` helpers by adding a dedicated function for the common `identity` case and getting rid of the callbacks alltogether by realizing that all callbacks were of the pattern "use this fixed prefix list of adjustments, then add another adjustment with the unified type as the target type". No behavioral changes intended |
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This is the main source code repository for Rust. It contains the compiler, standard library, and documentation.
Why Rust?
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Performance: Fast and memory-efficient, suitable for critical services, embedded devices, and easily integrated with other languages.
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Reliability: Our rich type system and ownership model ensure memory and thread safety, reducing bugs at compile-time.
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Productivity: Comprehensive documentation, a compiler committed to providing great diagnostics, and advanced tooling including package manager and build tool (Cargo), auto-formatter (rustfmt), linter (Clippy) and editor support (rust-analyzer).
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Read "Installation" from The Book.
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