Do not train the IA, let the AI train you
I recently found myself in a situation I hadn’t experienced in about three years: having the opportunity and the time to learn a new language from scratch. The company I work for has several develo...

Source: DEV Community
I recently found myself in a situation I hadn’t experienced in about three years: having the opportunity and the time to learn a new language from scratch. The company I work for has several developers with extensive experience in Rust, and the internal community is growing in a very positive way, creating an ideal environment for learning and collaboration. However, on a personal level, I felt a bit "rusty" when it came to sitting down to study. I had been working for the same client for over three years using technologies like React and Ruby on Rails within a massive codebase. When you work on a project of that magnitude, the primary focus is gaining ownership as quickly as possible; only then do you get the chance to innovate with new technologies, if the architecture allows. As I was saying, this led me to a crossroads: I didn’t know where to begin. Everything felt like an uphill battle. I started by scouring all the documentation I could find. I reached the official Rust Book, but