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Rust is a curly-brace, block-structured expression language.
It visually resembles the C language family, but differs significantly in syntactic and semantic details.
Its design is oriented toward concerns of "programming in the large", that is, of creating
and maintaining boundaries - both abstract and operational - that preserve large-system integrity,
availability and concurrency.
It supports a mixture of imperative procedural, concurrent actor, object-oriented and pure functional styles.
Rust also supports generic programming and metaprogramming, in both static and dynamic styles.
A short summary of features
Type system: static, nominal, linear, algebraic, locally inferred
Memory safety: no null or dangling pointers, no buffer overflows
Concurrency: lightweight tasks with message passing, no shared memory
Generics: type parameterization with type classes
Exception handling: unrecoverable unwinding with task isolation
Memory model: optional task-local GC, safe pointer types with region analysis
Compilation model: ahead-of-time, C/C++ compatible
License: dual MIT / Apache 2
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