Rust
- 0 vote398 views1 answer
- 0 vote374 views1 answer
- 0 vote316 views1 answer
- 0 vote352 views1 answer
- 0 vote316 views1 answer
- 0 vote362 views1 answer
- 0 vote336 views1 answer
- 0 vote358 views1 answer
- 0 vote416 views1 answer
- 0 vote376 views1 answer
- 0 vote384 views3 answers
- 0 vote359 views1 answer
- 0 vote358 views1 answer
- 0 vote357 views1 answer
- 0 vote352 views1 answer
- 0 vote361 views1 answer
- 0 vote322 views1 answer
- 0 vote392 views1 answer
- 0 vote334 views1 answer
- 0 vote387 views5 answers
- 0 vote354 views1 answer
- 0 vote358 views1 answer
- 0 vote372 views1 answer
- 0 vote374 views1 answer
- 0 vote381 views2 answers
Rust is a systems programming language with three objectives: safety, speed, and concurrency. It achieves these goals without the use of a garbage collector, making it a valuable language for a variety of use cases that other languages aren't good at, including embedding in other languages, programs with specific space and time requirements, and writing low-level code, such as device drivers and operating systems.
It improves on existing languages in this field by incorporating a number of compile-time safety checks that create no runtime cost while removing all data races. Rust likewise strives towards 'zero-cost abstractions', even though some of these abstractions resemble high-level language. Even so, Rust provides exact control in the same way that a low-level language would.