This is the next iteration of “The Rust Programming Language”, which is currently located in the main Rust repository. If you want to read the book, you should check it out there or on the web.
If you would like to see this version rendered, it’s on GitHub pages.
Building the book requires mdBook >= v0.0.13. To get it:
$ cargo install mdbook
To build the book, type:
$ mdbook build
The output will be in the book
subdirectory. To check it out, open it in
your web browser.
Firefox:
$ firefox book/index.html # Linux
$ open -a "Firefox" book/index.html # OS X
Chrome:
$ google-chrome book/index.html # Linux
$ open -a "Google Chrome" book/index.html # OS X
To run the tests:
$ mdbook test
We'd love your help! Please see CONTRIBUTING.md.
As the book will be published by No Starch, we first iterate here, then ship the text off to No Starch. Then they do editing, and we fold it back in.
As such, there’s a directory, nostarch, which corresponds to the text in No Starch’s system.
When we've started working with No Starch in a word doc, we will also check those into the repo in the nostarch/odt directory. To extract the text from the word doc as markdown in order to backport changes to the online book:
- Open the doc file in LibreOffice
- Accept all tracked changes
- Save as Microsoft Word 2007-2013 XML (.docx) in the tmp directory
- Run
./doc-to-md.sh
- Inspect changes made to the markdown file in the nostarch directory and copy the changes to the src directory as appropriate.
This is mostly for Carol's reference because she keeps having to look it up.
We're using Graphviz for some of the diagrams in the
book. The source for those files live in the dot
directory. To turn a dot
file, for example, dot/trpl04-01.dot
into an svg
, run:
$ dot dot/trpl04-01.dot -Tsvg > src/img/trpl04-01.svg
In the generated SVG, remove the width and the height attributes from the svg
element and set the viewBox
attribute to 0.00 0.00 1000.00 1000.00
or other
values that don't cut off the image.
To scan source files for spelling errors, you can use the spellcheck.sh
script. It needs a dictionary of valid words, which is provided in
dictionary.txt
. If the script produces a false positive (say, you used word
BTreeMap
which the script considers invalid), you need to add this word to
dictionary.txt
(keep the sorted order for consistency).
This is mostly for Carol's reference because she keeps having to look it up.
$ tr -d '\015' < DOS-file > UNIX-file