Rollup merge of #34699 - phlogisticfugu:master, r=steveklabnik
enhancewindows documentation in getting-started - minor pronoun fix We -> You - PATH troubleshooting - dir output is vertical (but did not include timestamps) - executables not in %PATH% require .\ r? @steveklabnik
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@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ an Internet connection to run the commands in this section, as we’ll be
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downloading Rust from the Internet.
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We’ll be showing off a number of commands using a terminal, and those lines all
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start with `$`. We don't need to type in the `$`s, they are there to indicate
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start with `$`. You don't need to type in the `$`s, they are there to indicate
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the start of each command. We’ll see many tutorials and examples around the web
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that follow this convention: `$` for commands run as our regular user, and `#`
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for commands we should be running as an administrator.
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@ -159,9 +159,11 @@ You should see the version number, commit hash, and commit date.
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If you do, Rust has been installed successfully! Congrats!
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If you don't and you're on Windows, check that Rust is in your %PATH% system
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variable. If it isn't, run the installer again, select "Change" on the "Change,
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repair, or remove installation" page and ensure "Add to PATH" is installed on
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the local hard drive.
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variable: `$ echo %PATH%`. If it isn't, run the installer again, select "Change"
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on the "Change, repair, or remove installation" page and ensure "Add to PATH" is
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installed on the local hard drive. If you need to configure your path manually,
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you can find the Rust executables in a directory like
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`"C:\Program Files\Rust stable GNU 1.x\bin"`.
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Rust does not do its own linking, and so you’ll need to have a linker
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installed. Doing so will depend on your specific system, consult its
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@ -339,7 +341,8 @@ On Windows, you'd enter:
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```bash
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$ dir
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main.exe main.rs
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main.exe
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main.rs
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```
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This shows we have two files: the source code, with an `.rs` extension, and the
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@ -347,7 +350,7 @@ executable (`main.exe` on Windows, `main` everywhere else). All that's left to
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do from here is run the `main` or `main.exe` file, like this:
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```bash
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$ ./main # or main.exe on Windows
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$ ./main # or .\main.exe on Windows
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```
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If *main.rs* were your "Hello, world!" program, this would print `Hello,
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