RUST Enums ARE Better

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  • čas přidán 8. 06. 2024
  • RUST does ENUMS better than Typescript and that’s a fact, no matter what they say.
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Komentáře • 500

  • @ThePrimeagen
    @ThePrimeagen  Před rokem +42

    first, also hey, let me know what you think about this code video? I tried to make LOTs of code, but cool and exciting. (also like the video, ty ty :))

    • @diegolikescode
      @diegolikescode Před rokem

      hey prime, where do I find the streams where you teached BigO and data structures? I cant find it ;-;

    • @asmunds5831
      @asmunds5831 Před rokem

      Might be my favorite one yet! I really like how you "show, don't tell" us that Rust is better. Currently halfway through the Rust Handbook, hoping I get an idea for something to create soon!

    • @fulconandroadcone9488
    • @bombrman1994
      @bombrman1994 Před 3 měsíci

      hope you keep doing stuff like these. I know you are taking on a different arch doing click baits, but you are truly a good teacher dont turn to the dark side :D

  • @matheusnogueira7219
    @matheusnogueira7219 Před rokem +451

    I feel so hyped to learn Rust every time you make a video on it

  • @SkyKosiner
    @SkyKosiner Před rokem +175

    I really love this new style with showing the ctode, great video!

  • @nikensss
    @nikensss Před rokem +137

    Oh my God, these animations and the code presentations are God tier! What the fuck is this super high quality!!! Also the explanations are top notch. The video is amazing! 10/10

    • @NathanHedglin
      @NathanHedglin Před rokem +12

      Gotta love Motion Canvas

    • @al1gned
      @al1gned Před rokem +7

      @@NathanHedglin thank you, i was looking for this :)

  • @JannisAdmek
    @JannisAdmek Před rokem +38

    I love clear Result/optional types, these are soo much better then exceptions!

  • @loucadufault6549
    @loucadufault6549 Před rokem +24

    Seems very similar to language features from the FP world, specifically OCaml.
    The match functionality with extracting out data from container values is so powerful that it serves as the basis for most algorithms in OCaml.
    It’s pretty cool to see so many languages adopting FP language features like Python and Rust taking matching.

    • @dealloc
      @dealloc Před rokem +12

      Funny you should say it. Rust did get a lot of inspiration from other languages such as OCaml and Swift, etc. In fact, the Rust compiler was written in OCaml before being self-hosted.

    • @markzuckerbread1865
      @markzuckerbread1865 Před rokem +3

      Wish more languages preferred total functions over partial functions that throw exceptions, checked exceptions are decent, but I prefer the latter.

    • @magne6049
      @magne6049 Před rokem +1

      ReScript is the OCaml for JS, and thus has a better type system than TS, comparable to Rust.

  • @al1gned
    @al1gned Před rokem +49

    Prime, I loved this style of comparing code. Really, really helps and also really dig that colour scheme;)

  • @teej_dv
    @teej_dv Před rokem +10

    enum RealProgrammingLanguages { Rust, Haskell }

  • @sebred
    @sebred Před rokem +10

    I am currently doing my CS undergrad and we are doing a one-year-long team-programming exercise. We have to do this in Java and in our code we basically have multiple enums that are templates to build functions out of. The hoops you have to jump through to make this a reality in Java are insane (we ended up coding a bunch of Factories) and I am quite jealous that it does not work like in Rust.

  • @StefanvonderKrone
    @StefanvonderKrone Před rokem +41

    I know this concept from Haskell and Swift. They‘re great! I really hope, that there will someday be an equivalent in TS

  • @DEVDerr
    @DEVDerr Před rokem +31

    Waiting for more Rust jobs, to finally switch from TypeScript to Rust. I love TypeScript sooo much, I written lots and lots of code during 5 years of my career, but Rust seems to me to be my next step

    • @godnyx117
      @godnyx117 Před rokem

      It's just a trend. It's very annoying to work with (which is ironic) and it takes 10 years to compile a hello world app. Even if it gets more popular, the whole world will not adopt it if the don't fix at least these problems. So it will stuck at a point. Typescript is the best for its usecase. Rust is not the best in ANYTHING.

    • @itsimplified
      @itsimplified Před rokem +7

      Switch from TypeScript to Rust? There programming languages are geared towards fundamentally different niches, they are not interchangeable. You won't be writing anything client-side for a Website (e.g. for a Browser) in Rust - because browsers don't run Rust code.

    • @DEVDerr
      @DEVDerr Před rokem +9

      @@itsimplified Not really. Browsers also run WebAssembly which Rust can be compiled to. So you can use Rust framework like Leptos to build Web Apps. Also TS is used for writing Node server-side applications which you can also do in Rust.
      So... they are almost interchangeable 😅

    • @itsimplified
      @itsimplified Před rokem +3

      @@DEVDerr How many websites made in WebAssembly have you seen? Which percentage of the web are these?

    • @irishuang5294
      @irishuang5294 Před rokem

      ​@kamilksen I saw from WebAssembly's official doc the other day saying they're still catching up for resource-intensive stuff like video editing/image/computer vision rendering stuff because for now, Rust doesn't support those as neatly as Javascript does. I'm sure soon enough, especially with more traffic/usage, they'll be caught up. Nothing starts out popular. It's adoption and iteration for improvements that make anything we have today "popular". "How many browsers are made of WebAssembly" is a regressive way of looking at tech :), and quite frankly, might become irrelevant the more popular it gets.

  • @RodrigoLopezVera
    @RodrigoLopezVera Před rokem +1

    Hey Prime! loved the vid. One quick question, what software do you use to edit your coding videos like this?

  • @throwaway3227
    @throwaway3227 Před rokem +4

    Also pretty cool is that Option (which would be the same as a nullable pointer) actually is represented as a single nullable pointer in memory, since rust knows that the pointer (Box) cannot be null, and therefore uses null to represent None.

  • @logannance10
    @logannance10 Před rokem +12

    I remember learning how Rust enums can hold a subtype and it blew my mind.

  • @Westar.
    @Westar. Před rokem +13

    Woah Prime! Calm down there! If you continue like this I'll end up learning rust

  • @scottiedoesno
    @scottiedoesno Před rokem +37

    It's really crazy how readable rust can be if you don't try to get too fancy. Loving getting to work with TS and Rust on my 2 projects right now

    • @ThePrimeagen
      @ThePrimeagen  Před rokem +7

      such luck!

    • @mannycalavera121
      @mannycalavera121 Před rokem +30

      When I write my potato rust I find it very readable. When I start using other peoples clean optimised Rust it's alien language.

    • @snk-js
      @snk-js Před rokem +4

      @@mannycalavera121 yeah, rust's functional power inherited from haskell allows for ultimate concise solutions. You can be as much semantic as the language is able to on both OOP or functional programming. Rust is the human being game changer

    • @CasimiroBukayo
      @CasimiroBukayo Před rokem +8

      Yep, Rust's arcane parts are wwaaaay more readable compared to C++ templates.

    • @DBGabriele
      @DBGabriele Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​@@CasimiroBukayoto old C++ templates, the modern ones are so much readable ... even more than rust (rust macros are hard to read).

  • @JR7SQUARE
    @JR7SQUARE Před rokem +2

    What software you used to show the code? Is the same as code aesthetics? Just curious. I really liked it.

  • @jocdiazm
    @jocdiazm Před rokem +4

    This type of format is so good. I feel that re-watching the video does not tire me at all if I don´t get the concept in the first run.

  • @Krzysiekoy
    @Krzysiekoy Před rokem +2

    Did you use some software to edit the code slides, or was this done by your editor?

  • @dimitardimitrov3421
    @dimitardimitrov3421 Před rokem +1

    Great video, as usual! The editing on this one however is next level. Well done! Really easy to follow! Good job! Keep up the good work!

  • @masteringmui
    @masteringmui Před rokem +1

    Great videos man. Would love to see some on meta skills like your process of learning and how to develop deep understanding of these abstract systems

  • @thomcarter3656
    @thomcarter3656 Před rokem

    Nice video! On the array example, am I right that this is demonstrating the difference between structural and nominal typing, and how the latter is stricter?

  • @techwithattila
    @techwithattila Před rokem +11

    The result types feel similar to Java checked exceptions. Interesting, in general I think the industry moved over to unchecked exceptions due to the caller not being able to handle properly all the possible exceptions. Seems like in Rust this works better I suppose?
    Also was glad to see that Kotlin enums share some similar traits as Rust which is neat.
    Great job with the code highlighting Prime! Did use any programs to achieve this darken / focus effect on the code?

    • @QazCetelic
      @QazCetelic Před rokem +4

      Checked exceptions are less flexible, unchecked exceptions are error-prone. I really like Rust’s method because it’s flexible and prevents unhandled errors.

    • @fabricehategekimana5350
      @fabricehategekimana5350 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, I am glad that more languages are adopting functional programming feature. That with OOP, we can have the better of both worlds

    • @CHEpachilo
      @CHEpachilo Před rokem +4

      The point of Rust type system (enums included) is that it guarantees that there is no undefined behavior in your code. It's not like here we have type system, here we have exception system and they somehow working together if programmer knows what he is doing. No, that's the old way and practice tells that it never works. Instead in Rust type system IS exception handling system. Why? Because types is the only thing that always guaranteed in compilation time. So that what makes this effect "if it compiles -- it works"

  • @chatt7486
    @chatt7486 Před rokem +11

    This feels pretty similar to Java enums. What I like about Rust's approach is having errors propagate as values, since like you said, you know exactly what you're getting just from the return type including potential errors

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před rokem +3

      Can the Java enums have a value attached to one of the variants? I thought they are just ints underneath, but if they do that's a gamechanger

    • @chatt7486
      @chatt7486 Před rokem +3

      @@mskiptr Yeah they can. Each of the items of the enum is an instance of the object you define

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před rokem

      @@chatt7486 So how would you write the following in Java?
      enum TreeOfInts {
      Node(TreeOfInts, u32, TreeOfInts),
      Nil,
      }

    • @chatt7486
      @chatt7486 Před rokem +2

      @@mskiptr Hmm I don’t think you can quite do something like that. Java enums basically are just a set of pre-defined instances of the class, so you can’t have individual enum values have different sets of properties (but, they can have the same set of properties). I suppose Rust enums are more akin to tagged unions whereas Java enums are more or less just a set of predefined instances.

    • @cemgecgel4284
      @cemgecgel4284 Před rokem +7

      @@mskiptr that would be
      sealed interface TreeOfInts {
      record Node(TreeOfInts left, int value, TreeOfInts right) implements TreeOfInts {}
      record Nil() implements TreeOfInts {}
      }

  • @stevenperez5260
    @stevenperez5260 Před rokem

    I wondered what tool did you use for the code animations? Great video 🙂👍🏻

  • @charlesoconor
    @charlesoconor Před 9 měsíci +2

    You can use typescript enums to enforce that each case is matched. It's not on by default which would be nice, but you can get it to give you a type error by sending the variable you're switching over to never.
    function getColorName(c: Color): string {
    switch (c) {
    case Color.Red:
    return "red";
    case Color.Green:
    return "green";
    // Forgot about Blue
    default:
    const exhaustiveCheck: never = c;
    throw new Error(`Unhandled color case: ${exhaustiveCheck}`);
    }
    }

  • @dzarko55
    @dzarko55 Před rokem

    My favorite part about result is that you can make your own error type that you can implement Into for - meaning you can seamlessly turn a random imported error type into your own with minimal code and clutter (usually *less* clutter)

  • @jacksonbourne
    @jacksonbourne Před rokem +2

    For 0:36, I cover this issue with the `@typescript-eslint/switch-exhaustiveness-check` rule in eslint. It would be ideal if it was a TypeScript warning or option, but I think most TypeScript devs use eslint anyway so I don't think it's a big issue

  • @liamcahill4955
    @liamcahill4955 Před rokem

    Holy crap. Just came across your channel. Love the production and content quality. Subbed!

  • @yorgohoebeke
    @yorgohoebeke Před rokem

    ThePrimeagen, I am learning rusting to create a cross platform app. I'm thinking of using rust for the backend. For the front end, should I rely on a Javascript framework or a rust framework like Dioxus?

  • @FinalSentinel
    @FinalSentinel Před rokem +8

    While this video may not be the best performing video, the knowledge packed into it is stellar. Thanks for making it Prime.

  • @AzerAnimations
    @AzerAnimations Před rokem +4

    Hey Prime, nice video. Have you ever tried Haskell? I would be curious what you thought of it. Rust has so much momentum now and I wish some other really cool languages like Zig, Haskell, or even Common Lisp or Clojure could get some love from a big voice.

    • @raianmr2843
      @raianmr2843 Před rokem +1

      Gawd knew Clojure and Haskell wud be too powerful if He made the popular 😭

  • @hacktor_92
    @hacktor_92 Před rokem +2

    a fun, random fact about rust enums: if you want to have an "any" type (i.e. retrieving a value from a database store), you can use it in order to map db types to rust types. this is how surrealdb handles query values internally for each column

  • @abdisamadkhalif4283
    @abdisamadkhalif4283 Před rokem +2

    Prime, is this video part of an upcoming Rust For TypeScript Devs course. Amazing explanations, as always. Thank you.

  • @xpygx1599
    @xpygx1599 Před rokem

    A fix to the scalability issue you mention with traditional enums is to make an X macro that expands into a static array. This way, it is impossible to miss a single enum type. Then, you don't need a function, rather index into the static array using the enum name to yield its value.

  • @EduardLepner
    @EduardLepner Před rokem +5

    Pattern matching in Elixir is even more mind blowing.

  • @BenjaminWheeler0510
    @BenjaminWheeler0510 Před rokem +7

    I like to think of Rust enums as C unions. I know it's not a one-to-one comparison but I think it makes the most sense

  • @stephene706
    @stephene706 Před rokem

    Beautiful video! I’d recommend slowing down a tad bit tho, felt like you were going too fast at times

  • @vasiliossyrakis2100
    @vasiliossyrakis2100 Před rokem

    How'd you animate all those fancy text comparisons?

  • @pluraltest9242
    @pluraltest9242 Před rokem

    in the first example switch statement make sense; what if you dont want yellow to do anything? you still have to add it but then immediately break?

  • @morotspaj
    @morotspaj Před rokem +1

    I think you should mention exhaustive switches in typescript via function assertUnreachable(x: never): never { }. It would also make a lot of sense to mention tagged union types in typescript which brings it closer to rust enums.

  • @mateuszdworak1252
    @mateuszdworak1252 Před rokem

    Looking at this, coming from Swift to Rust might actually be way easier than I thought. This sounds exactly like Swift enums, even Optional is basically enum { case none, some(T) }

  • @MasterHigure
    @MasterHigure Před rokem +1

    Don't forget let else, which landed recently. It's the early return guard version of if let, although it lets (heh) you do other things as well. And it moves so much code to the left.

  • @thomassynths
    @thomassynths Před rokem +2

    FWIW, you can get exhaustiveness checking in TS switch statements by using something like
    default: notReachable(value);
    where
    function notReachable(value: NoReturn): NoReturn {}
    Anyway, algebraic data types FTW. Glad languages like Rust are looking at functional languages for inspiration.

  • @anon3118
    @anon3118 Před rokem

    I did the rustling exercise(not all of it yet) and I really like how enums are used in match cases and results. I never even thought of using them in a vector though

  • @wisdomelue
    @wisdomelue Před rokem

    hi primagen, do you mind sharing the language you write mostly at netflix?

  • @livghit
    @livghit Před rokem +4

    Thank you very much for the Inspiration and motivation you give me / us trough youre wonderfull blaizinglyyyyyyy fast videos !!! I love you're vibe !

  • @KunamatataEU
    @KunamatataEU Před rokem

    What do you use for the code part of the video?

  • @ra-dro
    @ra-dro Před rokem

    Thanks for highlightning interesting parts.
    Rust looks really promising.
    Regarding exceptions, if I get you right, there is interesting opinion on forcing explicitly manage exeptions.
    Article is The Trouble with Checked Exceptions

  • @patrikmeszaros3171
    @patrikmeszaros3171 Před rokem +3

    The video was entertaining and educational at the same time, Well Done! 😄

  • @FunctionGermany
    @FunctionGermany Před rokem

    the second point you brought up about Item and string seems to be based on the duck-typed nature of TS. TS must be duck-typed because the types don't exist at runtime, so you can only assure that types are compatible with each other, but not actually the correct instances (unless you use prototypes/classes). so i think this applies to every statically typed language, not just TS. maybe not a fair comparison?

  • @AZisk
    @AZisk Před rokem +2

    Good vid. btw, you can add methods to Enums in TypeScript too

  • @morgengabe1
    @morgengabe1 Před rokem

    How do you choose between result parameterized by option and vis versa

  • @0xBienCuit
    @0xBienCuit Před rokem +7

    You would well fit into an aula giving a lecture to a whole class and each student would come out understanding what they have just learned

    • @smartjackasswisdom1467
      @smartjackasswisdom1467 Před rokem

      He has courses, his personality is a lot less explosive but he really motivates you to learn.

  • @CBusschaert
    @CBusschaert Před 10 měsíci

    legit a great video. I do feel bad that it's doing not doing as well as your other ones. I share your pain in that regard.

  • @charetjc
    @charetjc Před rokem

    > Who handles the error?
    This is why I fundamentally abhor exceptions for error handling. Every time I try to catch exceptions without resorting to `catch (BaseException e)`, assuming the language has one base class for exceptions, I always find one undocumented and uncaught exception that crashes my app, because the only way to find all the exceptions thrown is to read all the functions you call, and all the functions those functions call, and all the functions those functions call, ad nauseam.

  • @jpbeckner7980
    @jpbeckner7980 Před rokem

    Simply amazing. You do explain very well, thank you for these videos
    and again, I'm super hyped to get back to Rust hshshshshs

  • @ahmadalghali90
    @ahmadalghali90 Před rokem

    Prime, what about Java or C# do you not like and prefer Rust over?

  • @coderstubechannel
    @coderstubechannel Před rokem +1

    Thank you for providing this comparison of Rust and JavaScript! Your perspective has inspired me to create my own videos on the topic. Thanks, see you soon! 💪

  • @anupjadhav
    @anupjadhav Před rokem

    Love this format, more videos like this please 🙏🏽

  • @n0kodoko143
    @n0kodoko143 Před rokem

    Sick editing, great video 👍

  • @El-Burrito
    @El-Burrito Před rokem

    You and the "No Boilerplate" channel have gotten me so interested in trying Rust

  • @MathieuTanguay2802
    @MathieuTanguay2802 Před rokem

    Dang! I didn't know enums could have methods in Rust. That's pretty cool. As a casual Rust dev, I find it hard to discover some of the rare pearls of Rust like this one. You just have to know that this feature exists. I have never heard of methods on enum in any other languages, making hard to look for this. Even if I already knew 95% of what you talked about in your video, the enum part blew my mind. Thanks Prime for doing these kind of videos. I really like the content you create. Keep it up!

    • @TekExplorer
      @TekExplorer Před rokem

      wait till you hear Dart enums can not only have methods, but constant parameters too.

  • @JorgeAlvarez-tq3cb
    @JorgeAlvarez-tq3cb Před rokem

    This was so entertaining to watch!! :) thanks for this sweet delicacy of content! I can tell you put a lot of effort into them no doubt

  • @user-ov5nd1fb7s
    @user-ov5nd1fb7s Před rokem +1

    You should have mentioned the feature of forcing non exhaustive pattern matching on an enum.
    It is done in libraries where you want to have the option of adding more variants without breaking
    users' code.
    #[non_exhaustive]
    enum MyEnum{...}

  • @YPCSFTLBYWSSAM
    @YPCSFTLBYWSSAM Před rokem

    Very nice presentation! Loved the commands being highlighted and everything.

  • @sabrinapyles563
    @sabrinapyles563 Před rokem +2

    JS->TS->Rust pipeline let's gooo. Love this kind of content from your channel.

  • @inDefEE
    @inDefEE Před rokem

    Would LOVE a video on how you manage to work full time, run a twitch and yt channel, and learn and work on your skills. All while having 4 kids and a wife!?
    I struggle harddddd to find more than 2-3 free hours per week and i’m a senior dev with a wife and 2 kids. Would love to know how you organize your time and make it all happen!

  • @urbaniv
    @urbaniv Před rokem

    Have you ever tried elm for front end? It's also strict toyed language and I think someone who loves types in Rust must love elm

  • @sayaks12
    @sayaks12 Před rokem

    a more semantically equivalent version of the Item type from typescript would technically be a
    ```
    union Item {
    foo: String,
    bar: usize,
    baz: Custom
    }
    ```
    though it is more semantically equivalent because it has a lot of the same issues as the typescript version, as well as being much more unsafe to actually use.

  • @krokom9
    @krokom9 Před rokem

    Enums in rust sound a lot like structs, a type that hold some data and you can define methods on those types. Is there some fundamental difference between structs, in Go for example, and enums in rust?

  • @jimhrelb2135
    @jimhrelb2135 Před 10 měsíci

    I really wish the tech-fluencers take inspiration from this much effort into putting such a valuable lesson for us. I would really wish that you publish writings using GPT if you find it helpful for speed for publication.
    I would love to read code-oriented and example-oriented style in blogs. It really makes it easier for me to "fork" the examples and consume it in my own notes, while allowing you to funnel to potentially a wider audience.
    No, this comment is not GPT-generated, and I nor did I tell it to explicitly write like I'm 13 years old

  • @Drama-ck2tp
    @Drama-ck2tp Před rokem

    Thumbnail is really good! It was satisfying to my eyes and rust enums are the best

  • @taragnor
    @taragnor Před rokem +2

    Rust is just such a well-designed language in general, and enums are a great example. Rust's enums are a combination of the classic enum concept of associating a constant int with a defined string to constrain values to a range of valid values, mixed with the idea of a union type, where you can have one variable that can hold multiple types of data. Most mainstream languages have seriously sucked at handling union types properly. Typescript somehow manages to even screw up the constant to act as a value constraint part too.

  • @TomDoesTech
    @TomDoesTech Před rokem

    bruh, if you make this a series I might have to learn rust

  • @daltonyon
    @daltonyon Před rokem

    Awesome Prime, bring more differences and why Rust is better!!! First look enums seems the same in TS and Rust, but know I now there's a huge difference!!

  • @snipzmattio5887
    @snipzmattio5887 Před rokem

    Nice video man, I always used enums anyways. Whats the colorscheme btwm

  • @JohnR436
    @JohnR436 Před rokem

    Swift also has all these features with enumerated & you’d be surprised how much easier everything is to maintain when using enums this way. The possible permutations are logically sealed & so it’s very hard to miss things if you base your foundation of workable items in enums.
    The best kind of code is the kind that won’t compile if you do something the system isn’t meant to do.

    • @MrNatsuDragneel
      @MrNatsuDragneel Před rokem

      Most languages ​​are the same as Rust, C# for example is the same. Rust has become a religion almost followers are going crazy.

  • @rumplstiltztinkerstein

    Preach it bro! For a future where we spend more time building and less time debugging!

  • @masonictemple3193
    @masonictemple3193 Před rokem

    The code animations/highlighting are on point. Super fun to read

  • @codewithalade5399
    @codewithalade5399 Před rokem +1

    You are the Goat. I'm waiting for your livestream on Frontendmaster

  • @DaddyFrosty
    @DaddyFrosty Před rokem

    This reminds a lot of c#, it has pattern matching though it’s still called switch, and extension methods which lets u define functions in a similar way to “impl”, and most importantly flag enums, not sure if rust has flag enums, but it seems stupid not to

  • @artifishul
    @artifishul Před rokem

    Great work Prime. Keep it up. Proud of you.

  • @giuliopimenoff
    @giuliopimenoff Před 8 měsíci +1

    The rust enums often remind me of Kotlin sealed classes, I know their are not fundamentally the same thing, but the experience in using them is somewhat similar.
    You should take a look at Kotlin, it's a really powerful language and great for backend dev (expecially with ktor ;)

  • @yousifalfaki4389
    @yousifalfaki4389 Před rokem

    dude i love your content so much best of luck

  • @jma42
    @jma42 Před rokem

    damn, I was just learning these yesterday. As a typescript dev I am really loving the rust enums so far, especially the pattern matching!

  • @hubertboguski
    @hubertboguski Před rokem

    love how you showed the code, i think if you took more breaks to clarify everything it would be even better, (like okay this is what we did up to this point) lovin it tho

  • @StuartLoria
    @StuartLoria Před 8 měsíci

    Awesome video, the best so far

  • @RedHandedBug
    @RedHandedBug Před rokem

    No intro with what Enums are and when to use them? :(

  • @cofeek-codes7607
    @cofeek-codes7607 Před rokem

    what is the font in your terminal?

  • @peacemekka
    @peacemekka Před 11 měsíci +1

    Rust is brilliant. This error handling however does put a lot of boilerplate match/if statements. But I agree its better than debugging random crashing & failures.

  • @dealloc
    @dealloc Před rokem

    I'd say the "string | number | Custom" type isn't quite equivalent to the Rust's enum, because there are no primitive variants in the Rust example (since that is not possible, which why we need to wrap the value type). You can think of each variant as its own type that can wrap around their associated values.
    It would be more correct to say
    type Item = Foo | Bar | Baz;
    Where any variant Foo, Bar and Baz are typed as:
    type Foo = {
    kind: "Foo"; // Discriminator
    value: string; // Bar = number, Baz = Custom
    }
    This way we also avoid the issue with pushing strings to the array.
    You could think of this as being similar to the more verbose version in Rust:
    enum Item {
    Foo { value: String },
    Bar {.value: usize },
    Baz ( value: Custom }
    }
    Albeit with extra step of defining the discriminator manually.

  • @uwuzote
    @uwuzote Před rokem

    It's also worth mentioning (i don't know about TS), that rust enums are ADT-sums and you can have aribatary data inside variants, in most languages like c++ enum is int with name

  • @luiscarlosjayk
    @luiscarlosjayk Před 13 dny

    Pretty neat explanation about how Rust Enums are superior to Typescript Enums and also its type system in general. I wouldn't say it's Typescript's fault as it tries to solve an issue to a language that wasn't made with Types in mind.
    And second, about the presentation style, animations, etc, gorgeously and simple, not bloated with crazy animations; highlighting side by side TS and equivalent in Rust was really nice.
    10 out of 10 for this presentation and explanation

  • @Maniac-007
    @Maniac-007 Před rokem

    4:00 “Every square is a quadrilateral, but not every quadrilateral is a square” 🤓🤓
    Sorry had to do it, love ur videos btw keep going ❤

  • @NathanHedglin
    @NathanHedglin Před rokem

    Damn that was one solid video Prime. You've outdone yourself.

  • @Ipanienko
    @Ipanienko Před rokem +1

    The first example is a problem with the js switch statement, not the enum.

  • @10produz90
    @10produz90 Před rokem

    Wow that new presentation style looks awesome

  • @m47h4r
    @m47h4r Před rokem

    In very short, explicitness over implicitness. I like it.

  • @alkeryn1700
    @alkeryn1700 Před rokem

    my only nitpick about rust enums is if you want to use c like enums for example enum Foo { red, blue, green } it is really annoying to cast the enum to an integer that'd be 0,1,2 or back and forth (from integer to the enum), which can be a little annoying, now there are crates to do it more seamlessly but still, it was a little anoying at times when writting a binary protocol.