• Dark Arc
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    -42 days ago

    Rust still allows people to do (basically) whatever they want via unsafe blocks.

    • @FizzyOrange
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      82 days ago

      Yeah but I have written a lot of Rust and I have yet to use a single unsafe block.

      Saying “but… unsafe!” is like saying Python isn’t memory safe because it has ctypes, or Go isn’t memory safe because of its unsafe package.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 days ago

      Sure, but you have to explicitly enable this feature. In c++ you can use the oldest shit from twenty years ago and your compiler happily does its job. All my c++ books are full of “you shouldn’t use xy as it is deemed unsafe now, but of course you still can”.

      • Dark Arc
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        -52 days ago

        If a “safe C++” proposal truly proposes a safe subset, then yes your C++ code would have to opt-in to doing unsafe things. For the purposes of this discussion of a safe subset … the point is moot.

        • @FizzyOrange
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          52 days ago

          It’s not moot. The Safe C++ is opt-in to safety. It has to be because otherwise it wouldn’t be compatible with existing C++.

          • Dark Arc
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            -4
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            2 days ago

            That’s a laudable difference /s. Using Rust is also an “opt-in” option.