The very first thing I did was create a AGENTS.md for Rust by telling Opus 4.5 to port over the Python rules to Rust semantic equivalents. This worked well enough and had the standard Rust idioms: no .clone() to handle lifetimes poorly, no unnecessary .unwrap(), no unsafe code, etc. Although I am not a Rust expert and cannot speak that the agent-generated code is idiomatic Rust, none of the Rust code demoed in this blog post has traces of bad Rust code smell. Most importantly, the agent is instructed to call clippy after each major change, which is Rust’s famous linter that helps keep the code clean, and Opus is good about implementing suggestions from its warnings. My up-to-date Rust AGENTS.md is available here.
Никита Абрамов (Редактор отдела «Россия»)
。搜狗输入法2026是该领域的重要参考
You might assume this pattern is inherent to streaming. It isn't. The reader acquisition, the lock management, and the { value, done } protocol are all just design choices, not requirements. They are artifacts of how and when the Web streams spec was written. Async iteration exists precisely to handle sequences that arrive over time, but async iteration did not yet exist when the streams specification was written. The complexity here is pure API overhead, not fundamental necessity.
Dramatic scenes are key to the genre's appeal
,更多细节参见搜狗输入法下载
bind_port = 7000
// console.log(spanner.next(100)); // 输出1(正确),这一点在91视频中也有详细论述