fix data headers

pull/10/head
Alexis Beingessner 10 years ago committed by Manish Goregaokar
parent 288fb5198d
commit 65d5d6e85a

@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Low-level programming cares a lot about data layout. It's a big deal. It also pe
influences the rest of the language, so we're going to start by digging into how data is
represented in Rust.
# The `rust` repr
## The rust repr
Rust gives you the following ways to lay out composite data:
@ -124,7 +124,7 @@ In principle enums can use fairly elaborate algorithms to cache bits throughout
with special constrained representations. As such it is *especially* desirable that we leave
enum layout unspecified today.
# Dynamically Sized Types (DSTs)
## Dynamically Sized Types (DSTs)
Rust also supports types without a statically known size. On the surface,
this is a bit nonsensical: Rust must know the size of something in order to
@ -212,12 +212,12 @@ struct Foo {
For details as to *why* this is done, and how to make it not happen, check out
[SOME OTHER SECTION].
# Alternative representations
## Alternative representations
Rust allows you to specify alternative data layout strategies from the default Rust
one.
# repr(C)
### repr(C)
This is the most important `repr`. It has fairly simple intent: do what C does.
The order, size, and alignment of fields is exactly what you would expect from
@ -241,14 +241,14 @@ still consumes a byte of space.
* This is equivalent to repr(u32) for enums (see below)
# repr(packed)
### repr(packed)
`repr(packed)` forces rust to strip any padding it would normally apply.
This may improve the memory footprint of a type, but will have negative
side-effects from "field access is heavily penalized" to "completely breaks
everything" based on target platform.
# repr(u8), repr(u16), repr(u32), repr(u64)
### repr(u8), repr(u16), repr(u32), repr(u64)
These specify the size to make a c-like enum (one which has no values in its variants).

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