If you are using #ProtonPass, we have some news for you:
🔗 Vault & password sharing is planned for later this year.
🌐 🖥️ In addition to the existing browser extensions and mobile apps, we are developing the web and desktop apps too. The web app is already in the works.
Find the entire Proton Pass roadmap here: https://proton.me/blog/pass-roadmap-2023.
@yosh I also understood that enums are a kind of polymorphism, and they are concrete types. However, it seems that whether they are considered polymorphic is also debated. Every explanation I've read also seems to pull some specific requirement for something to be polymorphic out of thin air.
It seemed fairly clear to me - you can have one variable represent one of possibly several different data types, just like trait objects. Are there other requirements in some formal definition somewhere?
@yosh I feel like I'm taking crazy pills here, but after half a decade of professional Rust development, I guess I don't understand what a "concrete type" is. Could you enlighten me?
Every explanation I see seems to conflict with what others say, including Stroustrup's.
The mental model I had was:
- "abstract" types and "concrete" types are opposites and mutually exclusive.
- abstract types cannot be instantiated, while concrete types can be
- generics and trait objects are abstract types
@frameworkcomputer Some people were asking about this on Reddit. Any discussions at Framework about using it?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WibczqINifA
It would be so amazing to have, and they manufacture it in Taiwan.