Any program requires comments, and Rust supports a few different varieties:
• Regular comments which are ignored by the compiler:
• // Line comments which go to the end of the line.
• /* Block comments which go to the closing delimiter. */
• Doc comments which are parsed into HTML library documentation:
• /// Generate library docs for the following item.
• //! Generate library docs for the enclosing item.
fn main() {
// This is an example of a line comment
// There are two slashes at the beginning of the line
// And nothing written inside these will be read by the compiler
// println!("Hello, world!");
// Run it. See? Now try deleting the two slashes, and run it again.
/*
* This is another type of comment, a block comment. In general,
* line comments are the recommended comment style. But
* block comments are extremely useful for temporarily disabling
* chunks of code. /* Block comments can be /* nested, */ */
* so it takes only a few keystrokes to comment out everything
* in this main() function. /*/*/* Try it yourself! */*/*/
*/
/*
Note: The previous column of `*` was entirely for style. There's
no actual need for it.
*/
// You can manipulate expressions more easily with block comments
// than with line comments. Try deleting the comment delimiters
// to change the result:
let x = 5 + /* 90 + */ 5;
println!("Is `x` 10 or 100? x = {}", x);
}
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