Rust's Secret Weapon for Taming Sprawling Codebases: Module Splitting Done Right
Your Rust project just hit 10k lines. Panic? Not with module splitting—it slices code into files and folders like a pro chef. Here's why it saves your sanity.
Your Rust project just hit 10k lines. Panic? Not with module splitting—it slices code into files and folders like a pro chef. Here's why it saves your sanity.
Tired of leaky APIs in your Rust crates? Pub use re-exports fix that, letting you shape what users see without exposing internals. Here's the no-BS breakdown.
You're knee-deep in a Rust module, fumbling for that parent function. Super to the rescue—or is it? Let's cut through the tutorial fog.
Rust's topped Stack Overflow's 'most loved' languages for nine years straight. But paths? They're still the silent killer for 80% of newbie compiles.
Staring at Cargo.toml in 2015, I thought Rust was overcomplicating things. Turns out, its package, crate, and module setup keeps massive projects sane—unlike the npm hell we've endured.