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| author | Ali Afsharzadeh <afsharzadeh8@gmail.com> | 2023-03-30 19:53:22 +0330 |
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| committer | Ali Afsharzadeh <afsharzadeh8@gmail.com> | 2023-03-30 19:53:22 +0330 |
| commit | 382e16eb7ea66cddc4860f4b19453b031a2a8a8a (patch) | |
| tree | 4867f505b36ed69381a294b58d056cd9e92b8439 /exercises/traits | |
| parent | 362c1b0d113ad9a5bd4d1dee8086757efd060785 (diff) | |
feat(docs): add markdown linter for exercises README.md files
Diffstat (limited to 'exercises/traits')
| -rw-r--r-- | exercises/traits/README.md | 2 |
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/exercises/traits/README.md b/exercises/traits/README.md index de67acd..ac87c64 100644 --- a/exercises/traits/README.md +++ b/exercises/traits/README.md @@ -7,13 +7,13 @@ Data types can implement traits. To do so, the methods making up the trait are d In this way, traits are somewhat similar to Java interfaces and C++ abstract classes. Some additional common Rust traits include: + - `Clone` (the `clone` method) - `Display` (which allows formatted display via `{}`) - `Debug` (which allows formatted display via `{:?}`) Because traits indicate shared behavior between data types, they are useful when writing generics. - ## Further information - [Traits](https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch10-02-traits.html) |
