auto merge of #9315 : thestinger/rust/doc, r=alexcrichton

This also renames the section, as managed vectors cannot be resized
(since it would invalidate the other references).
This commit is contained in:
bors 2013-09-19 23:11:19 -07:00
commit c7c769d8c2
2 changed files with 33 additions and 28 deletions

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@ -4,14 +4,14 @@
The container traits are defined in the `std::container` module.
## Unique and managed vectors
## Unique vectors
Vectors have `O(1)` indexing and removal from the end, along with `O(1)`
amortized insertion. Vectors are the most common container in Rust, and are
flexible enough to fit many use cases.
Vectors have `O(1)` indexing, push (to the end) and pop (from the end). Vectors
are the most common container in Rust, and are flexible enough to fit many use
cases.
Vectors can also be sorted and used as efficient lookup tables with the
`std::vec::bsearch` function, if all the elements are inserted at one time and
`bsearch()` method, if all the elements are inserted at one time and
deletions are unnecessary.
## Maps and sets
@ -42,10 +42,15 @@ implementing the `IterBytes` trait.
## Double-ended queues
The `extra::deque` module implements a double-ended queue with `O(1)` amortized
inserts and removals from both ends of the container. It also has `O(1)`
indexing like a vector. The contained elements are not required to be copyable,
and the queue will be sendable if the contained type is sendable.
The `extra::ringbuf` module implements a double-ended queue with `O(1)`
amortized inserts and removals from both ends of the container. It also has
`O(1)` indexing like a vector. The contained elements are not required to be
copyable, and the queue will be sendable if the contained type is sendable.
Its interface `Deque` is defined in `extra::collections`.
The `extra::dlist` module implements a double-ended linked list, also
implementing the `Deque` trait, with `O(1)` removals and inserts at either end,
and `O(1)` concatenation.
## Priority queues
@ -197,11 +202,11 @@ The function `range` (or `range_inclusive`) allows to simply iterate through a g
~~~
for i in range(0, 5) {
printf!("%d ", i) // prints "0 1 2 3 4"
print!("{} ", i) // prints "0 1 2 3 4"
}
for i in std::iter::range_inclusive(0, 5) { // needs explicit import
printf!("%d ", i) // prints "0 1 2 3 4 5"
print!("{} ", i) // prints "0 1 2 3 4 5"
}
~~~
@ -233,7 +238,7 @@ let mut it = xs.iter().zip(ys.iter());
// print out the pairs of elements up to (&3, &"baz")
for (x, y) in it {
printfln!("%d %s", *x, *y);
println!("{} {}", *x, *y);
if *x == 3 {
break;
@ -241,7 +246,7 @@ for (x, y) in it {
}
// yield and print the last pair from the iterator
printfln!("last: %?", it.next());
println!("last: {:?}", it.next());
// the iterator is now fully consumed
assert!(it.next().is_none());
@ -335,13 +340,13 @@ another `DoubleEndedIterator` with `next` and `next_back` exchanged.
~~~
let xs = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6];
let mut it = xs.iter();
printfln!("%?", it.next()); // prints `Some(&1)`
printfln!("%?", it.next()); // prints `Some(&2)`
printfln!("%?", it.next_back()); // prints `Some(&6)`
println!("{:?}", it.next()); // prints `Some(&1)`
println!("{:?}", it.next()); // prints `Some(&2)`
println!("{:?}", it.next_back()); // prints `Some(&6)`
// prints `5`, `4` and `3`
for &x in it.invert() {
printfln!("%?", x)
println!("{}", x)
}
~~~
@ -356,11 +361,11 @@ let xs = [1, 2, 3, 4];
let ys = [5, 6, 7, 8];
let mut it = xs.iter().chain(ys.iter()).map(|&x| x * 2);
printfln!("%?", it.next()); // prints `Some(2)`
println!("{:?}", it.next()); // prints `Some(2)`
// prints `16`, `14`, `12`, `10`, `8`, `6`, `4`
for x in it.invert() {
printfln!("%?", x);
println!("{}", x);
}
~~~
@ -387,17 +392,17 @@ underlying iterators are.
let xs = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5];
let ys = ~[7, 9, 11];
let mut it = xs.iter().chain(ys.iter());
printfln!("%?", it.idx(0)); // prints `Some(&1)`
printfln!("%?", it.idx(5)); // prints `Some(&7)`
printfln!("%?", it.idx(7)); // prints `Some(&11)`
printfln!("%?", it.idx(8)); // prints `None`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(0)); // prints `Some(&1)`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(5)); // prints `Some(&7)`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(7)); // prints `Some(&11)`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(8)); // prints `None`
// yield two elements from the beginning, and one from the end
it.next();
it.next();
it.next_back();
printfln!("%?", it.idx(0)); // prints `Some(&3)`
printfln!("%?", it.idx(4)); // prints `Some(&9)`
printfln!("%?", it.idx(6)); // prints `None`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(0)); // prints `Some(&3)`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(4)); // prints `Some(&9)`
println!("{:?}", it.idx(6)); // prints `None`
~~~

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@ -2979,7 +2979,7 @@ tutorials on individual topics.
* [The foreign function interface][ffi]
* [Containers and iterators](tutorial-container.html)
* [Error-handling and Conditions](tutorial-conditions.html)
* [Packaging up Rust code](rustpkg)
* [Packaging up Rust code][rustpkg]
There is further documentation on the [wiki], however those tend to be even more out of date as this document.
@ -2987,7 +2987,7 @@ There is further documentation on the [wiki], however those tend to be even more
[tasks]: tutorial-tasks.html
[macros]: tutorial-macros.html
[ffi]: tutorial-ffi.html
[rustpkg]: tutorial-rustpkg.html
[rustpkg]: rustpkg.html
[wiki]: https://github.com/mozilla/rust/wiki/Docs