Edit: This list is now maintained in the rust-anthology repo.
# If you work with git, you've probably had that nagging sensation of not knowing what branch you are on. Worry no longer! | |
export PS1="\\w:\$(git branch 2>/dev/null | grep '^*' | colrm 1 2)\$ " | |
# This will change your prompt to display not only your working directory but also your current git branch, if you have one. Pretty nifty! | |
# ~/code/web:beta_directory$ git checkout master | |
# Switched to branch "master" | |
# ~/code/web:master$ git checkout beta_directory | |
# Switched to branch "beta_directory" |
Disclaimer: I have no professional education in Compulational Fluid Dynamics, these are various notes on what I found/learned when trying to learn a bit on the topic. Some of the notes lack sources as I wrote them up later often just remembering some StackExchange answer. Some things I might have misinterpreted.
It's over 9 years old (as of 2024-02-18), there are many better guides! You might like https://rust-unofficial.github.io/too-many-lists/
% Let's build a binary tree!
Let's build a binary tree of strings in Rust. To recap, each node in a binary tree:
- must have a value
I recently found a nice emacs-mode, [irony-mode], which can be used with [company-mode], [flycheck-mode], and [eldoc-mode]. It works nicely with CMake-based projects. The document contains a list of instructions for setting things up. I assume that you're using a fresh-installed Ubuntu-12.04.5 (64-bit). It uses [Lean theorem prover][lean] as an example project.
pub struct DemDiscrete { | |
pub y: Vec<f32>, | |
pub x: Vec<f32>, | |
pub fx: Vec<f32>, | |
} | |
pub trait Base{ | |
fn get_fx(&self)-> &Vec<f32>; | |
fn get_x(&self)-> &Vec<f32>; | |
fn get_y(&self)-> &Vec<f32>; |