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For several consecutive years, Rust has been voted "most loved programming language" in Stack Overflow's annual developer survey. This open source systems programming language is now used for everything from game engines and operating systems to browser components and virtual reality simulation engines. But Rust is also an incredibly complex language with a notoriously difficult learning curve.
Rather than focus on the language as a whole, this guide teaches Rust using a single small, complete, focused program in each chapter. Author Ken Youens-Clark shows you how to start, write, and test each of these programs to create a finished product. You'll learn how to handle errors in Rust, read and write files, and use regular expressions, Rust types, structs, and more.
Discover how to:
Use Rust's standard libraries and data types to create command-line programs
Write and test Rust programs and functions
Read and write files, including stdin, stdout, and stderr
Document and validate command-line arguments
Write programs that fail gracefully
Parse raw and delimited text
Use and control randomness
Git Branches
The book was originally published in 2022, when the clap (command-line argument parser) crate was a v2.33.
The book was updated in 2024 to use clap v4, which has two patterns for parsing, builder (similar to the original v2.33 code) and derive.
The branches are organized as follows:
main: Contains the clap v4 derive pattern
clap_v4_builder: Contains the clap v4 builder pattern
clap_v2: Contains the original programs from the 2022 version of the book that use clap v2.33
About
Code for Command-Line Rust (O'Reilly, 2024, ISBN 9781098109417)