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fix text of tutorials
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@ -234,7 +234,7 @@ would therefore be subject to garbage collection. A heap box that is
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unrooted is one such that no pointer values in the heap point to
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it. It would violate memory safety for the box that was originally
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assigned to `x` to be garbage-collected, since a non-heap
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pointer---`y`---still points into it.
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pointer *`y`* still points into it.
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> ***Note:*** Our current implementation implements the garbage collector
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> using reference counting and cycle detection.
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@ -475,7 +475,7 @@ but otherwise it requires that the data reside in immutable memory.
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# Returning borrowed pointers
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So far, all of the examples we've looked at use borrowed pointers in a
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So far, all of the examples we have looked at, use borrowed pointers in a
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“downward” direction. That is, a method or code block creates a
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borrowed pointer, then uses it within the same scope. It is also
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possible to return borrowed pointers as the result of a function, but
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@ -509,7 +509,7 @@ guaranteed to refer to a distinct lifetime from the lifetimes of all
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other parameters.
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Named lifetimes that appear in function signatures are conceptually
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the same as the other lifetimes we've seen before, but they are a bit
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the same as the other lifetimes we have seen before, but they are a bit
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abstract: they don’t refer to a specific expression within `get_x()`,
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but rather to some expression within the *caller of `get_x()`*. The
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lifetime `r` is actually a kind of *lifetime parameter*: it is defined
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@ -481,7 +481,7 @@ an `Error` result.
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TODO: Need discussion of `future_result` in order to make failure
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modes useful.
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But not all failure is created equal. In some cases you might need to
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But not all failures are created equal. In some cases you might need to
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abort the entire program (perhaps you're writing an assert which, if
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it trips, indicates an unrecoverable logic error); in other cases you
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might want to contain the failure at a certain boundary (perhaps a
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@ -1084,8 +1084,8 @@ let managed_box : @Point = @Point { x: 5.0, y: 1.0 };
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let owned_box : ~Point = ~Point { x: 7.0, y: 9.0 };
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~~~
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Suppose we wanted to write a procedure that computed the distance
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between any two points, no matter where they were stored. For example,
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Suppose we want to write a procedure that computes the distance
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between any two points, no matter where they are stored. For example,
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we might like to compute the distance between `on_the_stack` and
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`managed_box`, or between `managed_box` and `owned_box`. One option is
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to define a function that takes two arguments of type point—that is,
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@ -1230,7 +1230,7 @@ let area = rect.area();
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~~~
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You can write an expression that dereferences any number of pointers
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automatically. For example, if you felt inclined, you could write
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automatically. For example, if you feel inclined, you could write
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something silly like
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~~~
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@ -1808,7 +1808,7 @@ s.draw_borrowed();
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~~~
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Implementations may also define standalone (sometimes called "static")
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methods. The absence of a `self` paramater distinguishes such methods.
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methods. The absence of a `self` parameter distinguishes such methods.
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These methods are the preferred way to define constructor functions.
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~~~~ {.xfail-test}
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@ -2522,7 +2522,7 @@ will not be compiled successfully.
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## A minimal example
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Now for something that you can actually compile yourself. We have
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Now for something that you can actually compile yourself, we have
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these two files:
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~~~~
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