Thread pools on the JVM should usually be divided into the following three categories:
- CPU-bound
- Blocking IO
- Non-blocking IO polling
Each of these categories has a different optimal configuration and usage pattern.
| use std::str; | |
| fn main() { | |
| // -- FROM: vec of chars -- | |
| let src1: Vec<char> = vec!['j','{','"','i','m','m','y','"','}']; | |
| // to String | |
| let string1: String = src1.iter().collect::<String>(); | |
| // to str | |
| let str1: &str = &src1.iter().collect::<String>(); | |
| // to vec of byte |
| # Redis Cheatsheet | |
| # All the commands you need to know | |
| redis-server /path/redis.conf # start redis with the related configuration file | |
| redis-cli # opens a redis prompt | |
| # Strings. |
| #!/usr/bin/env zsh | |
| # in fino veritas | |
| # Borrowing shamelessly from these oh-my-zsh themes: | |
| # fino-time | |
| # pure | |
| # https://gist.github.com/smileart/3750104 | |
| # Set required options |