diff --git a/src/intro.md b/src/intro.md index 323c0ceb..92459154 100644 --- a/src/intro.md +++ b/src/intro.md @@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ The Reference will tell you the syntax and semantics of references, destructors, It should be noted that we haven't synced The Rustnomicon and The Reference well, so they may have duplicate content. In general, if the two documents disagree, The Reference should be assumed to be correct (it isn't yet considered normative, it's just better maintained). -Topics that are within the scope of this book include: the meaning of (un)safety, unsafe primitives provided by the language and standard library, techniques for creating safe abstractions with those unsafe primitives, subtyping and variance, exception-safety (panic/unwind-safety), working with uninitialized memory, type punning, concurrency, interoperating with other languages (FFI), optimization tricks, how constructs lower to compiler/OS/hardware primitives, how to **not** make the memory model people angry, how you're **going** to make the memory model people angry, and more. +Topics that are within the scope of this book include: the meaning of (un)safety, unsafe primitives provided by the language and standard library, techniques for creating safe abstractions with those unsafe primitives, subtyping and variance, exception-safety (panic/unwind-safety), working with uninitialized memory, type punning, concurrency, interoperating with other languages (FFI), optimization tricks, how to construct lower to compiler/OS/hardware primitives, how to **not** make the memory model people angry, how you're **going** to make the memory model people angry, and more. The Rustonomicon is not a place to exhaustively describe the semantics and guarantees of every single API in the standard library, nor is it a place to exhaustively describe every feature of Rust.