Remove deprecated owned vector from rust.md
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@ -886,8 +886,8 @@ fn main() {
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// Equivalent to 'std::iter::range_step(0, 10, 2);'
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range_step(0, 10, 2);
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// Equivalent to 'foo(~[std::option::Some(1.0), std::option::None]);'
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foo(~[Some(1.0), None]);
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// Equivalent to 'foo(vec![std::option::Some(1.0), std::option::None]);'
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foo(vec![Some(1.0), None]);
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}
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~~~~
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@ -995,8 +995,8 @@ the function name.
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fn iter<T>(seq: &[T], f: |T|) {
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for elt in seq.iter() { f(elt); }
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}
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fn map<T, U>(seq: &[T], f: |T| -> U) -> ~[U] {
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let mut acc = ~[];
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fn map<T, U>(seq: &[T], f: |T| -> U) -> Vec<U> {
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let mut acc = vec![];
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for elt in seq.iter() { acc.push(f(elt)); }
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acc
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}
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@ -1159,10 +1159,10 @@ except that they have the `extern` modifier.
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~~~~
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// Declares an extern fn, the ABI defaults to "C"
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extern fn new_vec() -> ~[int] { ~[] }
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extern fn new_int() -> int { 0 }
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// Declares an extern fn with "stdcall" ABI
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extern "stdcall" fn new_vec_stdcall() -> ~[int] { ~[] }
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extern "stdcall" fn new_int_stdcall() -> int { 0 }
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~~~~
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Unlike normal functions, extern fns have an `extern "ABI" fn()`.
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@ -1170,8 +1170,8 @@ This is the same type as the functions declared in an extern
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block.
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~~~~
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# extern fn new_vec() -> ~[int] { ~[] }
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let fptr: extern "C" fn() -> ~[int] = new_vec;
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# extern fn new_int() -> int { 0 }
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let fptr: extern "C" fn() -> int = new_int;
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~~~~
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Extern functions may be called directly from Rust code as Rust uses large,
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@ -1509,7 +1509,7 @@ Implementation parameters are written after the `impl` keyword.
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~~~~
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# trait Seq<T> { }
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impl<T> Seq<T> for ~[T] {
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impl<T> Seq<T> for Vec<T> {
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/* ... */
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}
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impl Seq<bool> for u32 {
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@ -3347,7 +3347,7 @@ Such a definite-sized vector type is a first-class type, since its size is known
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A vector without such a size is said to be of _indefinite_ size,
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and is therefore not a _first-class_ type.
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An indefinite-size vector can only be instantiated through a pointer type,
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such as `&[T]` or `~[T]`.
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such as `&[T]` or `Vec<T>`.
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The kind of a vector type depends on the kind of its element type,
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as with other simple structural types.
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