I'm trying to learn rust and so far this has definitely made it so much more accessible.
Not to mention their super useful "rustlings" training which has these nice little challenges to get you used to language and syntax
That's what makes us humans different from computers. We don't ask how high, we just do it. Now, if it were a C pointer it would jump anywhere from 0 to 2^32-1. That's why C is more suited for artificial intelligence than it might initially seem. Thanks for coming to my tedx talk
I was mostly joking about a stray pointer of type uint32_t*
So the size of the pointer itself doesn't matter
i dislike rust, but have to give them credit for helpful error messages. not quite racket level but impressive
I don't know Rust but jump typically moves the program counter, where the height represents the number of instructions to move
Afaik rust doesn't have functions like that as they lead to unsafe code that's impossible to check variable lifetimes for. I think OP created the jump function.