Fix spelling mistakes in the guide
Also made some opinionated changes such as to prefer license over licence and judgment over judgement.
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@ -297,7 +297,7 @@ $ mv hello_world.rs src/hello_world.rs
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```
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Cargo expects your source files to live inside a `src` directory. That leaves
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the top level for other things, like READMEs, licence information, and anything
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the top level for other things, like READMEs, license information, and anything
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not related to your code. Cargo helps us keep our projects nice and tidy. A
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place for everything, and everything in its place.
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@ -1743,7 +1743,7 @@ fn main() {
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}
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```
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Sometimes, this makes things more readable. Sometimes, less. Use your judgement
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Sometimes, this makes things more readable. Sometimes, less. Use your judgment
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here.
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That's all you need to get basic input from the standard input! It's not too
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@ -2659,7 +2659,7 @@ modules, which can contain other modules, as deeply as you'd like.
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Note that we haven't mentioned anything about files yet. Rust does not impose a
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particular relationship between your filesystem structure and your module
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structure. That said, there is a conventional approach to how Rust looks for
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modules on the file system, but it's also overrideable.
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modules on the file system, but it's also overridable.
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Enough talk, let's build something! Let's make a new project called `modules`.
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@ -3511,7 +3511,7 @@ exporting the name again, somewhere else.
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We've now covered the basics of testing. Rust's tools are primitive, but they
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work well in the simple cases. There are some Rustaceans working on building
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more complicated frameworks on top of all of this, but thery're just starting
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more complicated frameworks on top of all of this, but they're just starting
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out.
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# Pointers
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@ -5494,7 +5494,7 @@ fn main() {
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Whew! This isn't too terrible. You can see that we still `let x = 5i`,
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but then things get a little bit hairy. Three more bindings get set: a
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static format string, an argument vector, and the aruments. We then
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static format string, an argument vector, and the arguments. We then
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invoke the `println_args` function with the generated arguments.
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This is the code (well, the full version) that Rust actually compiles. You can
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