It's just distorted rhetoric. Almost none of the bugs we see are memory safety problems or resource deallocation problems. So the amount by which Rust would reduce our bug load is pretty small. So I don't think it can claim that it addresses correctness.
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they might be approached (4) Rank each category by priority (5) Propose methods for dealing with each category (6) Accurately assess the degree to which each method will really alleviate each bug type (7) Accurately assess the increased costs due to adopting these methods, and
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correctly consider whether those costs outweigh the proposed benefit (8) Formulate some metrics that let you measure (6) and (7) in reality, and compare to your pre-estimates (9) Use 5-8 on some new set of complex projects, seeing how they worked over those projects' lifetimes.
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(10) goto 1
End of conversation
New conversation -
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Ask mozilla research or
@graydon_pub, I'm not versed enough to tell you why the choices made in Rust were made ^^Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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