From the archive of the guide:

Interestingly, it appears that Rust used to call Box, Rc, and Arc pointer types. So, unfortunately, it seems like the pointer types that the guide was claiming Rust once had are actually still in the language. However, that doesn't mean there still isn't a story behind these types. Rust actually used to have two different box types, ~T
and @T
, but these were removed in version 0.11.0 in favor of Box
and Gc
, respectively (believe it or not Rust actually had a garbage collector back then). In the 1.0.0 alpha, the box
keyword (which has been in the language from as early as 0.1.0) was feature-gated for a redesign, and the discussion is still happening to this day. After that change, no real major changes happened to Box
except for a couple extra trait implementations and method additions.
Now, for Arc and Rc. Arc
appears to have been added as early as version 0.3, and Rc
was added in version 0.7. Also, unlike modern Rust, Rc
did not have a way to get a mutable reference, and they instead opted for having both Rc
and RcMut
. Arc
was even weirder, having an immutable ARC
, a MutexARC
(instead of the current Arc<Mutex<T>>
), and a mutable RWARC
. In version 0.8, despite not being in the changelogs for whatever reason, ARC
finally got lowercased to Arc
. In version 0.9, more undocumented changes happened where Rc
was moved from the extra crate to std, and RcMut
was mysteriously removed. An UnsafeArc
was added into std::sync::arc
, but extra::arc::Arc
remained. In version 0.10, Weak
was added for cycle breaking, and prior to that version, Rust surprisingly tried to statically prevent Rc
cycles. In version 0.11.0, sweeping changes were made to Arc
, separating Arc
and Mutex
, but Arc
was still immutable and relied on Arc<RWLock<T>>
to simulate Arc
's current behavior. Strangely enough, Rc
was still immutable. In version 1.0.0, Rc
finally got the get_mut
method we know and love. However, Arc
still depended on RwLock
. Arc
was a bit slower, getting an unstable get_mut
function in 1.3.0.
And now, the interesting one. What happened to Gc
? It was removed in version 0.12 due to being poorly implemented, confusing, and the only reason why many obsolete language features existed at the time, with the promise that a garbage collector would be revisited in the future. As we know now, that never happened.
As for if you can see old docs, yes you can. They're all hosted at static.rust-lang.org
. Just go to https://static.rust-lang.org/doc/VERSION_NUMBER/CRATE_NAME/index.html
, such as https://static.rust-lang.org/doc/0.7/std/index.html.
@
/Gc
was removed altogether.