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The primary objective of rust in action is to encourage the exchange of ideas among Rust developers, who each possess a unique set of skills and expertise, through virtual collaboration. We explore an extensive range of concepts here. We strive to present information in the clearest and most straightforward manner possible, covering all the grounds needed to grasp it completely.
Our commitment is to provide a clutter-free experience, free of advertisements on the blogs, and without requiring a subscription—any information that is beneficial must be invariably democratized for all, thereby enabling readers to fully understand the subject matter at hand without having to rely on additional sources for further clarification.
Why Rust?
For a variety of reasons, the Rust programming language has become increasingly popular and widely adopting into many domains, and developers are increasingly selecting it for a variety of use cases. Here are some reasons why developers might opt for Rust:
- Memory safety
- Concurrency
- Performance
- Zero-cost abstractions
Rust is a great choice when performance matters and it solves pain points that bother many other languages. For the eighth year in a row, Rust has topped the chart as “the most desired programming language” in Stack Overflow’s annual developer survey, implying that many people who have had the chance to use it have fallen in love with it.
The Rust community continues to grow, the language continues to evolve, and its ecosystem is expanding, making it an appealing choice for a wide range of project types. With that said, Rust appears to be on a strong road as we head into the future.
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Happy learning!
Senthil Nayagan
Founder and content creator, towardsdata.dev and rustinaction.dev.
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