Rename images to be in nostarch's convention

And switch images 3 and 4, they appear in the opposite order
This commit is contained in:
Carol (Nichols || Goulding) 2016-09-06 17:39:56 -04:00
parent 6d617aba2a
commit ed557992cb
9 changed files with 5 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -167,7 +167,7 @@ You might say “copy the `String`!” This is both correct and incorrect at the
same time. It does a _shallow_ copy of the `String`. Whats that mean? Well,
lets take a look at what `String` looks like under the covers:
<img alt="string" src="img/foo1.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
<img alt="string" src="img/trpl04-01.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
A `String` is made up of three parts: a pointer to the memory that holds the
contents of the string, a length, and a capacity. The length is how much memory
@ -180,11 +180,11 @@ When we assign `s1` to `s2`, the `String` itself is copied, meaning we copy the
pointer, the length, and the capacity. We do not copy the data that the
`String`'s pointer refers to. In other words, it looks like this:
<img alt="s1 and s2" src="img/foo2.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
<img alt="s1 and s2" src="img/trpl04-02.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
_Not_ this:
<img alt="s1 and s2 to two places" src="img/foo4.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
<img alt="s1 and s2 to two places" src="img/trpl04-03.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
Theres a problem here. Both data pointers are pointing to the same place. Why
is this a problem? Well, when `s2` goes out of scope, it will free the memory
@ -240,7 +240,7 @@ also invalidates the first binding, instead of calling this a shallow copy,
it's called a _move_. Here we would read this by saying that `s1` was _moved_
into `s2`. So what actually happens looks like this:
<img alt="s1 and s2 to the same place" src="img/foo3.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
<img alt="s1 and s2 to the same place" src="img/trpl-04-04.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
That solves our problem! With only `s2` valid, when it goes out of scope, it
alone will free the memory, and were done.
@ -279,7 +279,7 @@ println!("{}", s1);
This will work just fine. Remember our diagram from before? In this case,
it _is_ doing this:
<img alt="s1 and s2 to two places" src="img/foo4.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
<img alt="s1 and s2 to two places" src="img/trpl04-03.png" class="center" style="width: 50%;" />
When you see a call to `clone()`, you know that some arbitrary code is being
executed, and that code may be expensive. Its a visual indicator that something

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