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Auto merge of #28492 - Ms2ger:a-name, r=steveklabnik

The id attribute has been an official part of HTML since 1997. There is no
reason not to use it.
This commit is contained in:
bors 2015-09-18 14:06:51 +00:00
commit 53ba768b8a

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@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ thread '<main>' panicked at 'Invalid number: 11', src/bin/panic-simple.rs:5
Here's another example that is slightly less contrived. A program that accepts
an integer as an argument, doubles it and prints it.
<a name="code-unwrap-double"/>
<div id="code-unwrap-double">
```rust,should_panic
use std::env;
@ -99,6 +99,7 @@ fn main() {
println!("{}", 2 * n);
}
```
</div>
If you give this program zero arguments (error 1) or if the first argument
isn't an integer (error 2), the program will panic just like in the first
@ -139,7 +140,7 @@ system is an important concept because it will cause the compiler to force the
programmer to handle that absence. Let's take a look at an example that tries
to find a character in a string:
<a name="code-option-ex-string-find"/>
<div id="code-option-ex-string-find">
```rust
// Searches `haystack` for the Unicode character `needle`. If one is found, the
// byte offset of the character is returned. Otherwise, `None` is returned.
@ -152,6 +153,7 @@ fn find(haystack: &str, needle: char) -> Option<usize> {
None
}
```
</div>
Notice that when this function finds a matching character, it doen't just
return the `offset`. Instead, it returns `Some(offset)`. `Some` is a variant or