diff --git a/src/doc/book/getting-started.md b/src/doc/book/getting-started.md index 22db70e605b..5add2359282 100644 --- a/src/doc/book/getting-started.md +++ b/src/doc/book/getting-started.md @@ -505,6 +505,9 @@ $ cargo run Hello, world! ``` +The `run` command comes in handy when you need to rapidly iterate on a +project. + Notice that this example didn’t re-build the project. Cargo figured out that the file hasn’t changed, and so it just ran the binary. If you'd modified your source code, Cargo would have rebuilt the project before running it, and you diff --git a/src/doc/book/guessing-game.md b/src/doc/book/guessing-game.md index 22cf6068e4d..222597be0a9 100644 --- a/src/doc/book/guessing-game.md +++ b/src/doc/book/guessing-game.md @@ -56,9 +56,7 @@ $ cargo build Excellent! Open up your `src/main.rs` again. We’ll be writing all of our code in this file. -Before we move on, let me show you one more Cargo command: `run`. `cargo run` -is kind of like `cargo build`, but it also then runs the produced executable. -Try it out: +Remember the `run` command from last chapter? Try it out again here: ```bash $ cargo run @@ -67,9 +65,8 @@ $ cargo run Hello, world! ``` -Great! The `run` command comes in handy when you need to rapidly iterate on a -project. Our game is such a project, we need to quickly test each -iteration before moving on to the next one. +Great! Our game is just the kind of project `run` is good for: we need +to quickly test each iteration before moving on to the next one. # Processing a Guess