diff --git a/docs/src/introduction.md b/docs/src/introduction.md index 2def6fcf..c3742005 100644 --- a/docs/src/introduction.md +++ b/docs/src/introduction.md @@ -1,5 +1,7 @@ # Introduction +![async-std logo](./images/horizontal_color.svg) + This book serves as high-level documentation for `async-std` and a way of learning async programming in Rust through it. As such, i focusses on the `async-std` and its task model give you. Please note that the Rust project provides its own book on asynchronous programming, called ["Asynchronous Programming in Rust"][async-book], which we highly recommend reading along with this book, as it provides a different, wider view on the topic. diff --git a/docs/src/overview/async-std.md b/docs/src/overview/async-std.md index 4c659653..2eeedfdb 100644 --- a/docs/src/overview/async-std.md +++ b/docs/src/overview/async-std.md @@ -1,7 +1,5 @@ # Welcome to `async-std` -![async-std logo](./images/horizontal_color.svg) - `async-std` along with its [supporting libraries][organization] is a library making your life in async programming easier. It provides provide fundamental implementations for downstream libraries and applications alike. The name reflects the approach of this library: it is a closely modeled to the Rust main standard library as possible, replacing all components by async counterparts. `async-std` provides an interface to all important primitives: filesystem operations, network operations and concurrency basics like timers. It also exposes an `task` in a model similar to the `thread` module found in the Rust standard lib. But it does not only include io primitives, but also `async/await` compatible versions of primitives like `Mutex`. You can read more about `async-std` in [the overview chapter][overview-std].