Free software supporter, proud Linux user 🐧, communist, supporter of 🇵🇸, 🇺🇦 and Mario’s brother, gay femboy 🏳️🌈 and evangelist of the glorious Rust programming language 🦀.
I support Palestine Action.


Rusty as in the Rust programming language.


I’ve been using FreeTube for a while and it’s great. It allows me to customise my feed to only include content from my subscriptions and filter out any recommendations designed to keep me on the platform for as long as possible.


I think this happens because people believe that ad blockers are “too good to be true”. That was what I first thought when first getting an ad blocker, that there was going to be some kind of “catch” like slowing down websites, making them less functional or being malicious. But it turns out they actually improve performance, rarely affect functionality and are even recommended by the FBI because they protect against malicious advertising.
Yes, it is that simple. In Rust if you have a structure
Personand you want to allow testing equality between instances, you just add that bit of code before the struct definition as follows:#[derive(PartialEq, Eq)] struct Person { name: String, age: u32, }In Rust,
PartialEqandEqare traits, which are similar to interfaces in Java. Manually implementing thePartialEqtrait in this example would be writing code that returns something likea.name == b.name && a.age == b.age. This is pretty simple but with large data structures it can be a lot of boilerplate.There also exist other traits such as
Cloneto allow creating a copy of an instance,Debugfor getting a string representation of an object, andPartialOrdandOrdfor providing an ordering. Each of these traits can be automatically implemented for a struct by adding#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Clone, Debug, PartialOrd, Ord)]before it.