11
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 19 Jan 2021
11 points (78.9% liked)
Rust Programming
8190 readers
4 users here now
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
Circular references and objects shared by multiple scopes (e.g. a lambda that uses the value of an UI element) are still quite annoying to work with and require a lot of boilerplate code because it requires wrapping it with a Rc and RefCell. None of this requires any additional effort when using a GC language like Kotlin or C#.
I have used Rust to write GTK applications but it wasn’t pretty and I ended up using GTKSharp in the end.
True, but I also find that when you are dealing with circular reference and shared object scopes a bit of extra syntax and wrapping is the least of your problems.
In this case the garbage collector handles the memory for you, but for every other complication arising from these patterns you are still on your own. Keeping track of updates, locks, non-memory resource.
GTK has poor compatibility with Rust, due to it's inheritance/OOP design. Iced-rs is a neat GUI library that works well with Rust's features, you define view separately from the update loop. In the view you place widgets which send messages, and the update function listens to those and based on pattern matching the message updates the central struct when one is sent.
You can often achieve the same result in a different way if you're not married to certain features, or in this case frameworks.