With the core library stabilized in Rust 1.6, the following becomes possible, and I do not need to replace libcore
with libstd
any more:
//extern crate core; //won't work without this line
extern crate num;
use core::ops::Add;
use num::bigint::{BigInt};
fn main() {
let mut big = "8705702225074732811211966512111".parse::<BigInt>().unwrap();
let one = "1".parse::<BigInt>().unwrap();
big = big.add(&one);
println!("{:?}", big);
}
But there is one thing puzzles me - why do I need to declare "extern crate core;"? As far as I know, libstd
is meant to be built on top of libcore
. libcore
is meant to be OS independent, while the implementation of libstd
can be OS specific. I never had the need to specify "extern crate std". What also puzzles me is that I do not need to add libcore
as a dependency in Cargo.toml in the above case, although it is an extern crate.
Is libcore
the only such case? Is this a temporary thing while the implementation of the language is getting stabilized?