It’s been some time since I last wrote. For the past three years, I’ve mostly been working with Solidity, but now I’ve decided to add a new programming language to my toolkit — Rust. Today, Rust opens ...
In context: Rust is a contemporary, general-purpose programming language designed to inherently ensure memory safety. Programs written in Rust are notably more secure, as various classes of bugs and ...
Cloud-computing giant Amazon Web Services (AWS) has outlined the reasons its engineers are embracing Rust, including that it's a more energy-efficient programming language. Just seven years ago, the ...
Reasons abound for Rust’s growing popularity: it’s fast, memory-safe without needing garbage collection, and outfitted with world-class tooling. Rust also allows experienced programmers to selectively ...
When Rust 1.0 was released ten years ago, it was accompanied by a promise: the compiler should still be able to translate any code written with version 1.0 decades later with current Rust versions.
Something to look forward to: Created by software developer Graydon Hoare while working at Mozilla Research in 2006, Rust keeps growing in popularity and winning new supporters among big tech ...