MY UDEMY COURSES ARE 87.5% OFF TIL August 3rd ($9.99) ➡ Python Data Science Series for $9.99 : Highest Rated & Largest Python Udemy Course + 56 Hrs + 200 Videos + Data Science bit.ly/Master_Python_36 ➡ New C++ Programming Bootcamp Series for $9.99 : Over 23 Hrs + 53 Videos + Quizzes + Graded Assignments + New Videos Every Month bit.ly/C_Course_36
Hey Derek, just wanted to say I bought your course. I didnt need it since I already know python but im curious about all the extra stuff I'll learn The main reason I bought it is because you've been so helpful over the years and your passion is what made me actually want to code
I cannot thank you and commend you enough Derek! 10 years ago I was working full time in construction and part time in landscaping and as a janitor while going to college. I was barely making enough to afford my small room and food. I came across your videos and spent every spare minute I had watching you and practicing everything you did because I loved computers, writing code, and wanted a better life for myself and my eventual family. Fast forward to today and thanks to you I am a full-time software and data engineer that also does BI consulting on the side. I have become successful enough to build a new home for my family, take care of my parents, and take care of my siblings. I haven't stopped learning (hence why I am here learning Rust!) and it's because you're a wonderful teacher that can take many complex topics and ideas and interpret them in a way that allows me and tens of thousands of others to learn and apply. Also because of you, I do everything possible to give back and teach others as best I can. Anyways, thanks for making this content and doing it without cost as you literally helped me to start a career and climb out of poverty. I owe you so much - thank you!
Thank you for taking the time to write such a nice message and making my New Year. Congratulations on all that you accomplished and I wish you and your family all the best! Your message is the reason why I keep making videos.
Thank you :) I did my best to cover the core language with a little more. I think anyone that works through this video will be able to move on to making real projects
Awesome! I used your old Rust video way back in the day when first learning Rust in 2019 and as of this month I've been a full-time Rust developer for a year so all's well that ends well. Going to let people know that you've got a new one!
What was interviewing for a Rust role like? I looked into Rust back in 2018 but didn't have enough experience with other languages to understand and be productive with it. I'm halfway through this video and feel like I could jump on a project with Rocket and start building backend web services after learning a bit of Erlang and Go.
@@mau5atron In my case the company was just starting to move to Rust and was looking for someone to help with that, plus I had written and recorded a lot of material here on the language so I was sort of pre-tested already. (Also helped that the company is Korean and I live in Korea)
@@mau5atron Thanks! There's definitely a shortage of material to learn Rust here in Korea so I've been making most of my videos in Korean (have a few English ones to add now though and are making those).
I have been watching Professor Derek Banas since 2010.. And now being Rust Enthusiast and learner, I want to extend sincere gratitude to your sir, Thank you for all what you do to teach us new things.
Dear Derek, I wish you all the best, Thank you for being with me for more than 8 years! I started watching your when I joined university and had almost no programming skills. And now I'm leading yet another project but I still enjoy watching your tutorials videos! With gratitude, Andrii
Small "error" (or better way existing): Position 2:28:03, chapter Rc T, "balance < 5.00" shall be "balance < amt", otherwise error when withdrawing e.g. 6.00
Great rundown of Rust!! In VSCode, Alt + Shift + up (or down) arrow key will copy a line (or highlighted lines). Then you can move the line(s) with alt + arrow keys
Wonderful course. one suggestion: Use dim color for the hints that auto generated. it is little bit confusing whether you typed it or it is a vscode hint
Awesome Video Derek! You are always my No.1 source of picking up a new language. Once again spent a dozen hours digesting this video. I will keep upvoting and boost the youtube algorithm.
Your tutorials on Java got me started on this journey around 2010. There was a long break in between, but I'm happy back at coding, in my first Rust job, and was VERY happy to see you post this. It will help many people to get started.
Hey derek, just wanna say you helped me so much with your videos. Back in secondary school 9 years ago, you are one of my first youtube channel that i use to learn programming. fast forward, now im working as software engineer, doing enterprise sites. Yet here i am, still learning from the same teacher. Thank you so much!!!
I originally expected this to be a tutorial upon the game Rust. Then I thought it was a comprehensive guide to rust, the stuff that's made from oxidizing iron. Now I'm aware that this is a 2.5 hour course on coding xD
Important note: the if example you are showing is NOT an expression. It's a statement. Expressions ALWAYS return something It the Ternary Operator example you say that you don't need a semicolon after the last statement, but the true and false are actually expressions in this case. Summary: Your if example is a statement and your ternary operator example is an expression. Please don't mix this up
Thank you Derek for making this video! Been meaning to jump into Rust again after a hiatus since 2018. I'm already halfway through it and feel pretty good about using Rust on some projects.
I love this tutorial! Thank you for all of the time and effort you put into it. Unrelated to the tutorial topic, but what keyboard are you using in this video? The alpha and return keys are soothing.
I think YT might monetize much, much more educational videos and tutorials like that. You Derek, deserve more thank a simple monetization, you deserve I title of teacher and got paid as a teacher just for videos like that. I want to thank you for this video. Seriously, my comment can’t express how much a thank you.
Every time I want to start learning Rust, I hit the same place early on that spoils the whole language for me: "do_something.expect("error type message") The only place that .expect("error type message") will EVER make sense in a program is if you actually expect something to break. Any other explanation given is the same result: a better word could have been chosen.
I had a problem with the last exercise with the thread and the bank account... then I went to chatgpt, pasted my code and told it to correct it for me.... and it DID! Although it used a "move" keyword in one place, and changed the 5.0 into amt, which actually made sense :o I got blown away. Anyway, coming back to the course... it has been great! I learned quite a bit :) Woow, it took me over 10 hours over the course of a few days to complete this 2.5h course.... can't imagine how much time it took Derek to prepare it and record it for us... :o
Just when I thought that I need to search for Rust all-in-1 video, I've found one! Thanks for uploading this 9 months ago Derek! I'm gonna catch the Rust wave.
I typically use while loops when the length or number of values is dynamic, and for loops when the length or number of values is static. Also I use them to help ensure the correct user input, and for testing parts of a function repeatedly.
You convinced me, i'll definitely dive into it, thanks Derek. Rust looks like really fun language, something low-level that i really needed, also rest api created with rust gonna be much more efficient than Python flask that im currently working in, right?
Awesome course. One nit pick, your description of Closures is not quite right. You are illustrating a lambda or anonymous function, but a closure is merely a scope which wraps values, that can be passed into other scopes (such as a function as an argument to another function). This is largely achieved in most cases by anonymous functions but these functions are not "closures" in that they merely are functions. The actual scope they contain and give access to is what actually creates the closure (i.e. it "closes the scope in") Many languages allow this construct and many don't particularly rely on anonymous functions, but all rely on first class functions (functions that can be passes as objects). iter() is a very good example of implementing a closure, especially as you illustrated the next() function!
This is very good. My one irritation is the constant VSCode popups which pop up and distract the viewer, sometimes temporarily overwriting text that has just been written. But other than that, a great intro to this very important language, thanks.
Yes in hindsight I wish I would have showed way more cargo commands. Now that I know people enjoy this long form, I'll cover literally everything in my next video.
I'm currently at 12:35. I wish you had mentioned that e.g. ': String', ': &str', 'Result', and 'msg:' were actually auto-inserted and the viewer (i.e. me) didn't need to enter them. I was following along and thought you entered them
@@DJDopeB Same here, probably because we installed a newer cargo/rust version and the syntax has changed since 2022. It compiled for me, when I removed `buf: `, `Result` and `msg:`. Unfortunately, this will have me look for a newer tutorial :/
This first part of the tutorial doesn't work at around 12:00 mark in the video. Rust throws a compiler error because of the missing .ok() before the .expect(). Maybe this is a version update difference to Rust since this video was made???
Hi, I'm almost at the end of this excellent course! Do you recommend another book or course on the rust programming language? (i saw your Programming Rust: Fast, Safe Systems Development 2nd Edition recommandation in description but i ask to know if there is something better)
I really appreciate this course, but the modules section, there was unneeded/excess use of public declarations. Like all of `Pizza`'s definition. I don't understand why you made those public.
The tutorial is really really amazing. I've just started it, and loving it already. Thank you so much brother 😊💙💙💙💙💙. But one simple issue with the rust analyzer. It works really really slow. Even on the video. It doesn't show the red errors until I run the project. Is there any way to fix it? Or make it any quicker??
One thing I dislike about a lot of beginner tutorials for languages, is the mass importing at the beginning. I think it'd be much better to just include as things are needed rather than just stating "we'll use this at a later point"
hey thnx for shearing the sosfullyTutorial in part "Iterators" i have understanding in compuert memory . here u get first array (1 st ) also the language didnt count from scratch /> i see in python and i'm still learning too / we do from left [ zero , one ,tow ..] its comin as *zero here in ur exmp as i'm understing . thnx for ur Tutorial agen.
Some good content here so thank you! However, it would be nice to cover things in order. A concept of ownership is covered only half way through a video when it's been used multiple times up to that point. There are other similar examples.
At 58:36 in the discussion about vectors, First you generate a pointer to the second element of vec2, then you get() that same element. This seems like duplication. Accessing vector elements is pretty minor, but why do things twice? DRY, as they say.
if you face an error like "error: linker `cc` not found" you might check if you have C build tools installed ("build-essential" and "gcc" on linux). in case that you have it, just reinstall gcc (run "sudo apt reinstall gcc") on linux
If you want to use 'print!' vs 'println!' macro in Derek's beginning interactive demo, you will want to flush the buffer in this case. 🚽 print!("What is your name?"); io::stdout().flush().unwrap(); // flush the buffer let mut input = String::new();
Is it weird that I had a big stupid smile on my face as I was learning this. Rust seems like something special and this is a great tutorial to get started!
Thank you for the instructive lecture, Sir. Sometimes, my compiler warn me to use "move" keyword in thread::spawn() in order to force the closure to take ownership of a object and any other referenced variables. As a beginner, I can still not grasp this concept. I just obbey it while I do not get it.
So I am a javascript developer, I have dabbled with c# but I didnt really see any significant benefits using it over Javascript, I am actively looking for a second language to dedicate some time to each day. The first thought for me was C++ because of being able to build my own addons for node, I am curious though can the same be done with rust? Edit: Sorry if the question seems a bit ammeter but I want to learn a language that I can use alongside what I am doing to try and expand my flexibility as a developer.
MY UDEMY COURSES ARE 87.5% OFF TIL August 3rd ($9.99)
➡ Python Data Science Series for $9.99 : Highest Rated & Largest Python Udemy Course + 56 Hrs + 200 Videos + Data Science bit.ly/Master_Python_36
➡ New C++ Programming Bootcamp Series for $9.99 : Over 23 Hrs + 53 Videos + Quizzes + Graded Assignments + New Videos Every Month bit.ly/C_Course_36
do we need to apply some coupon before purchase ?
Hey Derek, just wanted to say I bought your course. I didnt need it since I already know python but im curious about all the extra stuff I'll learn
The main reason I bought it is because you've been so helpful over the years and your passion is what made me actually want to code
no ads and a full course, from a very well articulated teacher. we don't deserve you
Your appreciation is all that is required :)
turn off your ad blocker
@@shafaghsepehr7466 hahha
@@shafaghsepehr7466 Lol
I don't mind the ads as long as I have an ad blocker
I cannot thank you and commend you enough Derek! 10 years ago I was working full time in construction and part time in landscaping and as a janitor while going to college. I was barely making enough to afford my small room and food. I came across your videos and spent every spare minute I had watching you and practicing everything you did because I loved computers, writing code, and wanted a better life for myself and my eventual family.
Fast forward to today and thanks to you I am a full-time software and data engineer that also does BI consulting on the side. I have become successful enough to build a new home for my family, take care of my parents, and take care of my siblings. I haven't stopped learning (hence why I am here learning Rust!) and it's because you're a wonderful teacher that can take many complex topics and ideas and interpret them in a way that allows me and tens of thousands of others to learn and apply.
Also because of you, I do everything possible to give back and teach others as best I can.
Anyways, thanks for making this content and doing it without cost as you literally helped me to start a career and climb out of poverty. I owe you so much - thank you!
Thank you for taking the time to write such a nice message and making my New Year. Congratulations on all that you accomplished and I wish you and your family all the best! Your message is the reason why I keep making videos.
Such an inspiration you are Derek.. may be I will find time to create a course and share my experiences
How long it took you to get your first job on programming and in what language?
I've been meaning to learn rust. Now I have an easy entry to the language. Thanks! Love your videos.
Thank you :) I did my best to cover the core language with a little more. I think anyone that works through this video will be able to move on to making real projects
@@derekbanas I have hard time understanding 1o1
also a good idea is checking out the ebook by running rustup docs -book in your terminal
Awesome! I used your old Rust video way back in the day when first learning Rust in 2019 and as of this month I've been a full-time Rust developer for a year so all's well that ends well. Going to let people know that you've got a new one!
What was interviewing for a Rust role like? I looked into Rust back in 2018 but didn't have enough experience with other languages to understand and be productive with it. I'm halfway through this video and feel like I could jump on a project with Rocket and start building backend web services after learning a bit of Erlang and Go.
@@mau5atron In my case the company was just starting to move to Rust and was looking for someone to help with that, plus I had written and recorded a lot of material here on the language so I was sort of pre-tested already. (Also helped that the company is Korean and I live in Korea)
mithradates very cool! I didn’t notice you had content on Rust in Korean. I appreciate the insight. I just subbed :)
@@mau5atron Thanks! There's definitely a shortage of material to learn Rust here in Korea so I've been making most of my videos in Korean (have a few English ones to add now though and are making those).
That's awesome! Congratulations on your job
I have been watching Professor Derek Banas since 2010.. And now being Rust Enthusiast and learner, I want to extend sincere gratitude to your sir,
Thank you for all what you do to teach us new things.
Thank you very much :) It is my pleasure to be of help. Thank you for the nice message
Randomly stopping by to thank you again for your Java and C# videos from years back. You helped make programming 'click' for me
That's awesome! Congratulations on all you accomplished!
For new viewers, you can add new dependencies with “cargo add”.
Dear Derek, I wish you all the best, Thank you for being with me for more than 8 years!
I started watching your when I joined university and had almost no programming skills. And now I'm leading yet another project but I still enjoy watching your tutorials videos!
With gratitude,
Andrii
Thank you for taking the time to say you have found my tutorials useful. Congratulations on all of your success! I wish you all the best!
Small "error" (or better way existing): Position 2:28:03, chapter Rc T, "balance < 5.00" shall be "balance < amt", otherwise error when withdrawing e.g. 6.00
Great rundown of Rust!!
In VSCode, Alt + Shift + up (or down) arrow key will copy a line (or highlighted lines). Then you can move the line(s) with alt + arrow keys
I hecking love this tutorial! Derek, the pace for me personally is perfect!
Thank you :) I'm happy I could help
Just the sheer level of information and knowledge you've put out Into the world is amazing. You're truly an exceptional human being.
Thank you for the kind compliment :) I’m very lucky to be able to do this
Wonderful course. one suggestion: Use dim color for the hints that auto generated. it is little bit confusing whether you typed it or it is a vscode hint
Awesome Video Derek! You are always my No.1 source of picking up a new language. Once again spent a dozen hours digesting this video. I will keep upvoting and boost the youtube algorithm.
Thank you very much :) I need help with the algorithm for sure
Putting the installation part at the end of the video is a really smart move. I wish other tutorials did that too
Thanks I thought that was a good idea
Can't tell if this is sarcasm or not
Your tutorials on Java got me started on this journey around 2010. There was a long break in between, but I'm happy back at coding, in my first Rust job, and was VERY happy to see you post this. It will help many people to get started.
Thank you and congratulations!!!
Was it hard to find the job? How was the technical interview? Also congrats
Hey derek, just wanna say you helped me so much with your videos. Back in secondary school 9 years ago, you are one of my first youtube channel that i use to learn programming. fast forward, now im working as software engineer, doing enterprise sites. Yet here i am, still learning from the same teacher. Thank you so much!!!
Seems everytime I need to learn a language I come to you Derek. Very concise and you don't take forever to get going.
Bro I literally started learning rust this week. Perfect timing
Happy I could help
Finally ....i feel that i personally owe you a big one for making this particular one....im grateful for you sir ...
Thank you :) I’m very happy that I could help
i would love more rust content! ive never been more excited about a language since I learned how to code for the first time.
I'll see what I can do about making a bigger video with some real projects next time.
amazing, I used to know javascript and python quite well and this is the perfect entry to rust
I love this style - quick and to the point, loaded with info.
That's an outstanding tutorial. Would gladly pay for it or additional content about rust as a course in Udemy. As always, your work is exceptional!
Thank you for the nice compliment :)
I originally expected this to be a tutorial upon the game Rust. Then I thought it was a comprehensive guide to rust, the stuff that's made from oxidizing iron. Now I'm aware that this is a 2.5 hour course on coding xD
Important note: the if example you are showing is NOT an expression. It's a statement. Expressions ALWAYS return something
It the Ternary Operator example you say that you don't need a semicolon after the last statement, but the true and false are actually expressions in this case.
Summary: Your if example is a statement and your ternary operator example is an expression. Please don't mix this up
Thank you Derek for making this video! Been meaning to jump into Rust again after a hiatus since 2018. I'm already halfway through it and feel pretty good about using Rust on some projects.
That's great :) I'm happy I could help
I love this tutorial! Thank you for all of the time and effort you put into it. Unrelated to the tutorial topic, but what keyboard are you using in this video? The alpha and return keys are soothing.
It's easier to read thread_rng as "thread range", but I belive rng stands for "random number generator" and it's worth to mention that
Nice, I know what my Saturday is going look like. Thanks a lot Derek!!
There is a ton to learn in this video. I hope you find it useful
bro making a free tutorial with no ads at all, this is epic
I just watched a one minute and I already know this is what I needed!
WOW, I just started to learn rust in a few weeks and suddenly Derek comes and gives a tutorial on it.
I hope it helps you on your journey :) Rust is a wonderful language!
@@derekbanas you're one of the best teachers I have ever seen
Thank you for the nice compliment :) It is my pleasure to help
Thank you a lot Derek!
Just for contribution: We can declare variables with the same name and with the same data type.
I think YT might monetize much, much more educational videos and tutorials like that.
You Derek, deserve more thank a simple monetization, you deserve I title of teacher and got paid as a teacher just for videos like that.
I want to thank you for this video. Seriously, my comment can’t express how much a thank you.
Thank you Derek, This is Vasu. loved your rust intro. small appreciation.
Thank you very much for your support! I greatly appreciate it! I'm very happy that I could help.
I am currently at 1:44:05 and this Tutorial is great man!
I will tell you what. You had such an impact on my life and you keep doing it. This is an amazing human being people.
Thank you very much for taking the time to write such a nice message. I greatly appreciate it and I wish you all the best!
Every time I want to start learning Rust, I hit the same place early on that spoils the whole language for me: "do_something.expect("error type message")
The only place that .expect("error type message") will EVER make sense in a program is if you actually expect something to break. Any other explanation given is the same result: a better word could have been chosen.
It's conetent like this that makes me think that the web wasn't a mistake after all. Thank you, sir!
Thank you so much for this, what a fantastic introduction and primer. Will be checking out your other tutorials for sure.
I had a problem with the last exercise with the thread and the bank account... then I went to chatgpt, pasted my code and told it to correct it for me.... and it DID! Although it used a "move" keyword in one place, and changed the 5.0 into amt, which actually made sense :o I got blown away. Anyway, coming back to the course... it has been great! I learned quite a bit :) Woow, it took me over 10 hours over the course of a few days to complete this 2.5h course.... can't imagine how much time it took Derek to prepare it and record it for us... :o
Thank you for taking the time to tell me it helped and for sharing your journey, which was an interesting one :)
Just when I thought that I need to search for Rust all-in-1 video, I've found one! Thanks for uploading this 9 months ago Derek! I'm gonna catch the Rust wave.
It is a fantastic language with probably the best compiler ever
glad to see your new video man. keep it up
I typically use while loops when the length or number of values is dynamic, and for loops when the length or number of values is static. Also I use them to help ensure the correct user input, and for testing parts of a function repeatedly.
You convinced me, i'll definitely dive into it, thanks Derek. Rust looks like really fun language, something low-level that i really needed, also rest api created with rust gonna be much more efficient than Python flask that im currently working in, right?
Awesome course. One nit pick, your description of Closures is not quite right. You are illustrating a lambda or anonymous function, but a closure is merely a scope which wraps values, that can be passed into other scopes (such as a function as an argument to another function).
This is largely achieved in most cases by anonymous functions but these functions are not "closures" in that they merely are functions. The actual scope they contain and give access to is what actually creates the closure (i.e. it "closes the scope in")
Many languages allow this construct and many don't particularly rely on anonymous functions, but all rely on first class functions (functions that can be passes as objects).
iter() is a very good example of implementing a closure, especially as you illustrated the next() function!
This is very good. My one irritation is the constant VSCode popups which pop up and distract the viewer, sometimes temporarily overwriting text that has just been written. But other than that, a great intro to this very important language, thanks.
Turn off autosuggestion and use Ctrl+space when u want
@@jboxy I'm talking about in the video, not in my editor
@@neilclay5835 oh lol
I play and learn this tutorial repeatedly but still I'm not used to RUST. Thank you for your lesson.
I enjoyed learning Rust every second of this tutorial 👌🏻
Since Rust 1.62 you can do `cargo add ` instead of manually adding it to the Cargo.toml
Yes in hindsight I wish I would have showed way more cargo commands. Now that I know people enjoy this long form, I'll cover literally everything in my next video.
At 50:30, you can't use .bytes() to get unicode, or it has limited value. Not sure of the Rust terminology but it should e .cahars() or .graphemes()
Completed till 58:29 in one go, great lecture so far...
Thank you :) I’m happy I could help
Hugely helpful introduction to the language. Thank you
I'm currently at 12:35. I wish you had mentioned that e.g. ': String', ': &str', 'Result', and 'msg:' were actually auto-inserted and the viewer (i.e. me) didn't need to enter them. I was following along and thought you entered them
With it or without it I'm getting an error. Something like: expected some of 8 tokens. Not sure what it is. I'm stuck 😢
@@DJDopeB Same here, probably because we installed a newer cargo/rust version and the syntax has changed since 2022.
It compiled for me, when I removed `buf: `, `Result` and `msg:`.
Unfortunately, this will have me look for a newer tutorial :/
Great video as always, not entirely sure why I watched since I already know rust but I don't regret it.
Amazing. Now please make a real world small project using rust.
Hey Derek, this course is absolutely fantastic! Thank you so much!
Thank you very much :) I'm happy you enjoyed it
This first part of the tutorial doesn't work at around 12:00 mark in the video. Rust throws a compiler error because of the missing .ok() before the .expect(). Maybe this is a version update difference to Rust since this video was made???
Did not know Joe Swanson from Family Guy knew Rust. Loved listening to every minute of it! Great tutorial!
What a great instructor, your videos are amazing man. Thank you very much for uploading this
Hi, I'm almost at the end of this excellent course!
Do you recommend another book or course on the rust programming language?
(i saw your Programming Rust: Fast, Safe Systems Development 2nd Edition recommandation in description but i ask to know if there is something better)
I really appreciate this course, but the modules section, there was unneeded/excess use of public declarations. Like all of `Pizza`'s definition. I don't understand why you made those public.
Banas :D awesome thank you very much for this. i am an accomplished scientist now thanks to many of your videos.
The tutorial is really really amazing. I've just started it, and loving it already. Thank you so much brother 😊💙💙💙💙💙. But one simple issue with the rust analyzer. It works really really slow. Even on the video. It doesn't show the red errors until I run the project. Is there any way to fix it? Or make it any quicker??
wow crazy, I have been reading through the rust manual the last couple of days and this is great
Thank you :) I'm happy it helped
One thing I dislike about a lot of beginner tutorials for languages, is the mass importing at the beginning. I think it'd be much better to just include as things are needed rather than just stating "we'll use this at a later point"
hey thnx for shearing
the sosfullyTutorial
in part "Iterators"
i have understanding
in compuert memory .
here u get first array (1 st )
also the language didnt count from scratch /> i see in python
and i'm still learning too / we do from left [ zero , one ,tow ..]
its comin as *zero here in ur exmp as i'm understing .
thnx for ur Tutorial agen.
Some good content here so thank you! However, it would be nice to cover things in order. A concept of ownership is covered only half way through a video when it's been used multiple times up to that point. There are other similar examples.
At 58:36 in the discussion about vectors, First you generate a pointer to the second element of vec2, then you get() that same element. This seems like duplication. Accessing vector elements is pretty minor, but why do things twice? DRY, as they say.
It's get vs []. Get returns an option that's why it can be none. [] returns a reference and panics if it's out of bounds.
if you face an error like "error: linker `cc` not found" you might check if you have C build tools installed ("build-essential" and "gcc" on linux).
in case that you have it, just reinstall gcc (run "sudo apt reinstall gcc") on linux
Thank you Derek. I really appreciate the learning material.
Thank you :) I'm happy I could help
Thanks. I learned a lot from your videos since a long time.
Great tutorial 👍.
Thank you :) I’m glad they helped
Massive torrent of info, great stuff!
1:55:20 should have thrown an error opening the file, but you had File::create instead of File::open
@derek
1:33:11
Need brackets for trait constructor.
Also missing dyn keywork and sized self new trait
If you want to use 'print!' vs 'println!' macro in Derek's beginning interactive demo, you will want to flush the buffer in this case. 🚽
print!("What is your name?");
io::stdout().flush().unwrap(); // flush the buffer
let mut input = String::new();
Such a marathon lesson, I love it!
You are very smooth, hats off to you sir :)
the work!!! great vid man
Best Rust learning course on RUclips. Waiting for more on Rust. Thank You @derekbanas for this awesome tutorial.
I've been waiting for this.Thanks!
Thanks :) I hope you find it useful
Hello Derek, where have you been these days. Finally much awaited video is out here, it's very useful for beginners
Thank you for stopping by. I'll be updating the learn in one videos that I think need a refresh. Golang is next
@@derekbanas oh that's great. You have already uploaded golang i suppose.
Is it weird that I had a big stupid smile on my face as I was learning this. Rust seems like something special and this is a great tutorial to get started!
That's great! I agree! Every language can learn something from Rust!
Derek is back with amazing tutorials
Glad to learn that variables in Rust are immutable by default, because God knows you use a lot of "const" declarations when writing code with C/C++ ;)
Nice, can’t wait to watch this more thorough Rust tutorial!
Thank you :)
Thanks for this Derek. As usual your videos are all a must watch
1:23:18 Can someone please explain why we need an & in front of the string literal "Batman"
Thank you for the instructive lecture, Sir.
Sometimes, my compiler warn me to use "move" keyword in thread::spawn() in order to force the closure to take ownership of a object and any other referenced variables.
As a beginner, I can still not grasp this concept. I just obbey it while I do not get it.
Such an amazing voice sir. Congratulations.
Thank you for the nice compliment
Great video as usual. And you opened yourself up for it this time, "I'd buy that for a #1!" hehe
Super compact and informative tutorial! Thanks.
Thanks for the tutorial. It's really helpful for kickstart.
Thanks Derek, can't wait for your next Zig course, the next big thing after Rust!
I'll hold a vote and let everyone decide what my next learn in one should be
@@derekbanas how about nim?
What ever wins the vote today will be the next video. I'll make a video on any language
What's the syntax use for :: and . In that shapes example for new function you used Shape::new but for area you used .area()
6:44
if the run/debug dialog still doesnt show up go to user settings and make sure you have code lens and allow breakpoints everywhere enabled
So I am a javascript developer, I have dabbled with c# but I didnt really see any significant benefits using it over Javascript, I am actively looking for a second language to dedicate some time to each day. The first thought for me was C++ because of being able to build my own addons for node, I am curious though can the same be done with rust?
Edit: Sorry if the question seems a bit ammeter but I want to learn a language that I can use alongside what I am doing to try and expand my flexibility as a developer.
I am watching the tutorial,
it's really nice,
there is not so much intro to Rust
I also like the League of Legend Icon ;)
Visual Studio Code with rust-analyzer plugin vs Intellij Idea with Rust plugin? Which is better for rust only?