Hello and welcome to another issue of This Week in Rust and WebAssembly!

Rust is a systems language pursuing the trifecta: safety, concurrency, and speed.

WebAssembly is a stack-based virtual machine and instruction set. It is fast, safe, portable, and part of the open Web platform. By compiling to WebAssembly, we can run Rust code on the Web!

This is a weekly summary of Rust and WebAssembly’s progress and community.

Did we miss something? Tweet to us at @rustwasm or send us a pull request.

Want to get involved in Rust and WebAssembly? Join the Rust and WebAssembly working group!

News and Blog Posts from Around the Web

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RFCs

New RFCs

None.

Merged RFCs

Working Group Meetings

rustwasm.github.io

@DebugSteven and @alexcrichton aggregated the Rust and WebAssembly book, the wasm-bindgen guide, and the wasm-pack guide into a single bookshelf, where all of our docs can be found in one place!

twiggy

@data-pup added rustfmt and clippy integration into Twiggy’s CI setup.

and integration into Twiggy’s CI setup. @sepiropht improved Twiggy’s detection of what kind of binary it is looking at when there is no file extension.

walrus

@data-pup fixed the wasm round-tripping tests for the latest release of the webassembly/wabt tools.

tools. @alexcrichton added support for the WebAssembly SIMD proposal to walrus .

wasm-bindgen

wasm-pack

@drager wrote a test suite for wasm-pack ’s binary installation utility crate.

Requests for Contribution

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