You know a language has arrived when its toolchain ships as a standard component with operating systems.
Rust, Mozilla's language for safe and speedy systems level programming, has landed a prime-time slot in the next edition of Fedora Linux, according to the change set for the first public alpha for Fedora 25.
This doesn't mean that any system components in Fedora will be authored with Rust -- yet. But it does mean that Fedora users, many of whom are developers, will have easy access to Rust's ecosystem in their Fedora environments.
[...]Fedora's rationale for including Rust stems from both the language's growing popularity and its potential relevance to Fedora's user base. Aside from citing Rust's presence in the 2016 Stack Overflow Developer Survey as one of the most loved languages, Red Hat noted, "Mozilla is starting to use Rust in Firefox, and now Fedora's Firefox maintainers could enable those components."
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 02 2016, @01:17AM
The first tip from in every tutorial on Rust will be to download the latest stable RPM or DEB from the Rust web site, b/c whatever the distro's got is out of date.
(Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 02 2016, @02:28AM
> download the latest stable RPM or DEB from the Rust web site, b/c whatever the distro's got is out of date.
Obviously. After all, rust never sleeps. They give you this, but you pay for that.