Greetings and welcome to rustlings. This project contains small exercises to get you used to reading and writing Rust code. This includes reading and responding to compiler messages!
...looking for the old, web-based version of Rustlings? Try here
Alternatively, for a first-time Rust learner, there's several other resources:
- The Book - The most comprehensive resource for learning Rust, but a bit theoretical sometimes. You will be using this along with Rustlings!
- Rust By Example - Learn Rust by solving little exercises! It's almost like
rustlings, but online
To use rustlings you need to have Rust installed on your computer. To install Rust, go to rustup.rs.
Once Rust is installed, clone the rustlings repository and enter the resulting directory:
git clone https://github.com/rust-lang/rustlings.git
cd rustlingsNote: If you're on MacOS, make sure you've installed Xcode and its developer tools by typing xcode-select --install.
Note: If you have Xcode 10+ installed, you also need to install the package file found at /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg.
Once in the directory you can install rustlings on your machine and run the introduction:
cargo install --path .
rustlingsIf you choose to not install the rustlings command, just replace rustlings with cargo run in the rest of this text.
The exercises are sorted by topic and can be found in the subdirectory rustlings/exercises/<topic>. For every topic there is an additional README file with some resources to get you started on the topic. We really recommend that you have a look at them before you start.
The task is simple. Most exercises contain an error that keep it from compiling, and it's up to you to fix it! Some exercises are also ran as tests, but rustlings handles them all the same. To run the exercises in the recommended order, execute:
rustlings verifyThis will try to verify the completion of every exercise in a predetermined order (what we think is best for newcomers). If you don't want to rerun verify every time you change a file, you can run:
rustlings watchThis will do the same as verify, but won't quit after running and instead automatically rerun as soon as you change a file in the exercises/ directory.
In case you want to go by your own order, or want to only verify a single exercise, you can run:
rustlings run exercises/path/to/exercise.rsOr if it's a #[test]:
rustlings run --test exercises/path/to/exercise_with_test.rsIn case you get stuck, there is usually a hint at the bottom of each exercise.
After every couple of sections, there will be a test that'll test your knowledge on a bunch of sections at once. These tests are found in exercises/testN.rs.
Rustlings isn't done; there are a couple of sections that are very experimental and don't have proper documentation. These include:
- Errors (
exercises/errors/) - Option (
exercises/option/) - Result (
exercises/result/) - Move Semantics (could still be improved,
exercises/move_semantics/)
Additionally, we could use exercises on a couple of topics:
- Structs
- Better ownership stuff
impl- ??? probably more
If you are interested in improving or adding new ones, please feel free to contribute! Read on for more information :)
First step is to add the exercise! Call it exercises/yourTopic/yourTopicN.rs, make sure to
put in some helpful links, and link to sections of the book in exercises/yourTopic/README.md.
Then, you'll want to make sure it gets verified when you run rustlings verify. Open src/verify.rs and
put your exercise somewhere in there:
...
compile_only("exercises/functions5.rs")?;
+ compile_only("exercises/yourTopic/yourTopicN.rs")?;
compile_only("exercises/test1.rs")?;
...That's all!
rustlings is basically a glorified rustc wrapper. Therefore the source code
isn't really that complicated since the bulk of the work is done by rustc.
src/main.rs contains a simple clap CLI that loads from src/verify.rs and src/run.rs.
rustlings was originally written by Carol!
