Awesome
<div align="center"> <h1>The Rust and WebAssembly Book</h1><strong>This small book describes how to use Rust and WebAssembly together. It also consists of tutorials with cool exercises.</strong>
<h3> <a href="https://rustwasm.github.io/docs/book/">Read the Book</a> <span> | </span> <a href="https://github.com/rustwasm/book/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md">Contributing</a> <span> | </span> <a href="https://discordapp.com/channels/442252698964721669/443151097398296587">Chat</a> </h3><sub>Built with 🦀🕸 by <a href="https://rustwasm.github.io/">The Rust and WebAssembly Working Group</a></sub>
</div>About
This repo contains documentation on using Rust for wasm, common workflows, how to get started and more as you dive deeper. It acts as a guide for doing some really neat things with rust.
If you would like to start learning how to use Rust and WebAssembly together, you can read the book online here.
Open issues for improving the Rust and WebAssembly book.
Building the Book
The book is made using mdbook
. To install it you'll need cargo
installed. If you don't have any Rust tooling installed, you'll need to install
rustup
first. Follow the instructions on the site in order to get
setup.
Once you have that done then just do the following:
$ cargo install mdbook
Make sure the cargo install
directory is in your $PATH
so that you can run
the binary.
Now just run this command from this directory:
$ mdbook build
This will build the book and output files into a directory called book
. From
there you can navigate to the index.html
file to view it in your browser. You
could also run the following command to automatically generate changes if you
want to look at changes you might be making to it:
$ mdbook serve
This will automatically generate the files as you make changes and serves them
locally so you can view them easily without having to call build
every time.
The files are all written in Markdown so if you don't want to generate the book
to read them then you can read them from the src
directory.