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You're reading from  Asynchronous Programming in Rust

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781805128137
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Carl Fredrik Samson
Carl Fredrik Samson
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Carl Fredrik Samson

Carl Fredrik Samson is a popular technology writer and has been active in the Rust community since 2018. He has an MSc in Business Administration where he specialized in strategy and finance. When not writing, he's a father of two children and a CEO of a company with 300 employees. He's been interested in different kinds of technologies his whole life and his programming experience ranges from programming against old IBM mainframes to modern cloud computing, using everything from assembly to Visual Basic for Applications. He has contributed to several open source projects including the official documentation for asynchronous Rust.
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async/await

The previous example could simply be written as the following using async/await keywords:

async fn async_main() {
    println!("Program starting")
    let txt = Http::get("/1000/HelloWorld").await;
    println!("{txt}");
    let txt2 = Http::("500/HelloWorld2").await;
    println!("{txt2}");
}

That’s seven lines of code, and it looks very familiar to code you’d write in a normal subroutine/function.

It turns out that we can let the compiler write these state machines for us instead of writing them ourselves. Not only that, we could get very far just using simple macros to help us, which is exactly how the current async/await syntax was prototyped before it became a part of the language. You can see an example of that at https://github.com/alexcrichton/futures-await.

The downside is of course that these...

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Asynchronous Programming in Rust
Published in: Feb 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781805128137

Author (1)

author image
Carl Fredrik Samson

Carl Fredrik Samson is a popular technology writer and has been active in the Rust community since 2018. He has an MSc in Business Administration where he specialized in strategy and finance. When not writing, he's a father of two children and a CEO of a company with 300 employees. He's been interested in different kinds of technologies his whole life and his programming experience ranges from programming against old IBM mainframes to modern cloud computing, using everything from assembly to Visual Basic for Applications. He has contributed to several open source projects including the official documentation for asynchronous Rust.
Read more about Carl Fredrik Samson