this post was submitted on 16 May 2024
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Learning Rust and Lemmy
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A collaborative space for people to work together on learning Rust, learning about the Lemmy code base, discussing whatever confusions or difficulties we're having in these endeavours, and solving problems, including, hopefully, some contributions back to the Lemmy code base.
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- Rust Community on programming.dev
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for me this mostly comes down to the state of the ecosystem (game dev with godot, websites in js are 2 cases where I'm not really interested in using rust) but for example when I want to just solve a problem and the input size won't cause a naive approach to run very slow, I'll probably grab python instead or if the solution is something hyper dynamic (a la dynamic programming), it would probably be simpler in ocaml or haskell or f# - ie something more "truly" immutable so that you don't have to worry about data lifetimes or manual memory management (and it's generally very cheap and elegant to push & pop from stacks and queues in such languages)
re: causality and "spooky action at a difference"
It's more:
mutable vs immutable references mean any mutable access must happen before or after all other accesses [to the same data]
any access to a moved value must happen before the move itself
So ownership effectively imposes a certain causal order on your code, that emerges from which behavior uses/accesses which data. In many aspects it's way too hazy to act as a "proper" causal order, but I often find it easier to write code that passes the borrow checker on the first try when I try to organize my code according to this notion.
I would almost describe my mental image as if there were compiler-enforced RWLocks on all mutable references, and as if all moves are somehow telling the os to change which virtual memory address is mapped onto the (moved) data (without actually copying the data into a different part of memory).
Yea nice.
I'd kinda developed the same attitude but never really thought about it in terms of "causality" as you put it. Instead I had more of a "clean code" or "efficiency" framing, but I like yours much better.