Do hardware hackers need a new programming language? Your first answer might be no, but hold off a bit until you hear about a new language called Rust before you decide for sure. We all know real ...
Every new programming language needs to build from its core supporters to reach developers and organizations and ensure a bright future. It seems that Rust, a language created at Mozilla, has managed ...
Programming language Rust now has the backing of the Rust Foundation, an independent organization that will steward the language's future as more developers begin using it. Rust, hatched at Mozilla as ...
Reasons abound for Rust’s growing popularity: it’s fast, memory-safe without needing garbage collection, and outfitted with world-class tooling. Rust also allows experienced programmers to selectively ...
Rust mascot Ferris the crab welcomes attendees to RustConf 2025 in Seattle, where the community marked the 10th anniversary of the open-source programming language’s first stable release, and ...
The Rust Foundation, which supports the development of the popular open-source Rust programming language, today released a new report detailing the recent accomplishments of its Security Initiative – ...
Automatic translators can facilitate migration from C to Rust, but existing translators generate unsatisfactory code by relying on language features whose safety is not validated by the compiler and ...
When Rust 1.0 was released ten years ago, it was accompanied by a promise: the compiler should still be able to translate any code written with version 1.0 decades later with current Rust versions.
What just happened? Rust will soon be part of Linux, Torvalds has decided. The memory safe programming language will join C and the other traditional languages developers use to create new pieces and ...