Is it just me, or does Rust feel much more bare-bones than other languages? I just started learning it recently and this is the one thing that stood out to me, much more so than the memory management business. A lot of things that would normally be part of the language has to be achieved through meta-programming in Rust.

Is this a deliberate design choice? What do we gain from this setup?


Edits:

  1. Somehow, this question is being interpreted as a complaint. It’s not a complaint. As a user, I don’t care how the language is designed as long as it has a good user experience, but the curious part of my mind always wants to know why things are the way they are. Maybe another way to phrase my question: Is this decision to rely more on meta-programming responsible for some of the good UX we get in Rust? And if so, how?
  2. I’m using meta-programming to mean code that generates code in the original language. So if I’m programming in Rust, that would be code that generate more Rust code. This excludes compilation where Rust gets converted into assembly or any other intermediate representation.
  • jutty
    link
    62 days ago

    Most high-level languages do a lot of things implicitly, like casting types, cloning values, deciding what the default is. Rust tends to avoid that, which though less convenient makes behavior more predictable, reducing footguns and surprises.