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Rust Programming Guide for Beginners 2026: Ownership, Structs and Cargo

⏱️6 min read  ·  1,302 words

Rust is the fastest-growing systems programming language in 2026. Used at Linux kernel, Android, Windows, AWS, and Meta, Rust delivers C-level performance with memory safety guaranteed at compile time. This beginner guide covers Rust’s core concepts without jargon overload.

Why Rust in 2026?

  • Memory safety — no null pointers, no buffer overflows, no use-after-free
  • Performance — matches C/C++ with zero runtime overhead
  • Fearless concurrency — data races caught at compile time
  • Modern tooling — Cargo package manager, rustfmt, clippy, rust-analyzer
  • WebAssembly — run Rust in the browser at near-native speed
  • Loved 9 years running — most loved language in Stack Overflow survey

Installation

# Install rustup (manages Rust versions)
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
source ~/.cargo/env

# Verify
rustc --version    # rustc 1.79.0
cargo --version    # cargo 1.79.0

# Create new project
cargo new hello_rust
cd hello_rust

# Run
cargo run

# Build release (optimized)
cargo build --release

Variables, Types, and Functions

// Variables are immutable by default
fn main() {
    let x = 5;          // immutable
    let mut y = 10;     // mutable
    y += 1;             // OK
    // x += 1;          // ERROR: cannot assign to immutable variable

    // Type annotation (usually inferred)
    let name: String = String::from("Alice");
    let age: u32 = 30;
    let pi: f64 = 3.14159;
    let active: bool = true;

    // Constants
    const MAX_SIZE: usize = 1024;

    // Shadowing — create new variable with same name
    let spaces = "   ";
    let spaces = spaces.len(); // now a number, not a string

    println!("Name: {name}, Age: {age}");
}

// Functions
fn add(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
    a + b  // no semicolon = expression, this is the return value
}

fn greet(name: &str) -> String {
    format!("Hello, {}!", name)
}

// Multiple return values via tuple
fn min_max(numbers: &[i32]) -> (i32, i32) {
    let min = *numbers.iter().min().unwrap();
    let max = *numbers.iter().max().unwrap();
    (min, max)
}

let (lo, hi) = min_max(&[3, 1, 4, 1, 5, 9]);
println!("min={lo}, max={hi}");

Ownership — Rust’s Core Concept

Rust’s ownership system is what makes memory safety possible without garbage collection:

// Rule 1: Each value has exactly one owner
// Rule 2: When owner goes out of scope, value is dropped (freed)
// Rule 3: Ownership can be transferred (moved)

fn main() {
    let s1 = String::from("hello");
    let s2 = s1;  // s1 is MOVED to s2
    // println!("{s1}"); // ERROR: s1 is no longer valid

    // Clone to make a copy
    let s3 = String::from("hello");
    let s4 = s3.clone();  // deep copy, both valid
    println!("{s3} {s4}");

    // Stack types (Copy trait): no move needed
    let n1 = 5;
    let n2 = n1;  // copied, n1 still valid
    println!("{n1} {n2}");
}

// Passing to functions transfers ownership
fn takes_ownership(s: String) {
    println!("{s}");
} // s is dropped here

fn gives_ownership() -> String {
    String::from("new string")  // moved to caller
}

fn main() {
    let s = String::from("hello");
    takes_ownership(s);
    // s no longer valid here!

    let s2 = gives_ownership();  // s2 owns the new string
}

References and Borrowing

// Borrow without taking ownership using &
fn calculate_length(s: &String) -> usize {
    s.len()
}  // s goes out of scope, but doesn't drop the String (it's borrowed)

fn main() {
    let s1 = String::from("hello");
    let len = calculate_length(&s1);  // pass reference
    println!("{s1} has {len} characters");  // s1 still valid!

    // Mutable references
    let mut s = String::from("hello");
    change(&mut s);  // pass mutable reference
    println!("{s}");  // "hello, world"
}

fn change(s: &mut String) {
    s.push_str(", world");
}

// Rules:
// 1. Any number of immutable references
// 2. OR exactly one mutable reference
// 3. Never both at the same time
// This prevents data races at compile time!

Structs and Methods

#[derive(Debug, Clone)]  // auto-implement Debug and Clone
struct Rectangle {
    width: f64,
    height: f64,
}

impl Rectangle {
    // Associated function (like static method)
    fn new(width: f64, height: f64) -> Self {
        Rectangle { width, height }
    }

    fn square(size: f64) -> Self {
        Rectangle { width: size, height: size }
    }

    // Method — takes &self (immutable borrow)
    fn area(&self) -> f64 {
        self.width * self.height
    }

    fn perimeter(&self) -> f64 {
        2.0 * (self.width + self.height)
    }

    fn can_hold(&self, other: &Rectangle) -> bool {
        self.width > other.width && self.height > other.height
    }

    // Mutable method
    fn scale(&mut self, factor: f64) {
        self.width *= factor;
        self.height *= factor;
    }
}

fn main() {
    let mut rect = Rectangle::new(30.0, 50.0);
    println!("{rect:?}");  // Debug output: Rectangle { width: 30.0, height: 50.0 }
    println!("Area: {}", rect.area());
    rect.scale(2.0);
    println!("After scaling: {}x{}", rect.width, rect.height);
}

Enums and Pattern Matching

// Enum with data
#[derive(Debug)]
enum Shape {
    Circle(f64),                      // radius
    Rectangle(f64, f64),              // width, height
    Triangle { base: f64, height: f64 },  // named fields
}

impl Shape {
    fn area(&self) -> f64 {
        match self {
            Shape::Circle(r) => std::f64::consts::PI * r * r,
            Shape::Rectangle(w, h) => w * h,
            Shape::Triangle { base, height } => 0.5 * base * height,
        }
    }
}

// Option<T> — replace null
fn find_user(id: u32) -> Option<String> {
    if id == 1 { Some(String::from("Alice")) } else { None }
}

fn main() {
    match find_user(1) {
        Some(name) => println!("Found: {name}"),
        None => println!("Not found"),
    }

    // if let — match one arm
    if let Some(name) = find_user(1) {
        println!("User: {name}");
    }

    // unwrap_or, map, and_then
    let name = find_user(2).unwrap_or(String::from("Guest"));
    let length = find_user(1).map(|n| n.len()).unwrap_or(0);
}

// Result<T, E> — error handling
fn parse_number(s: &str) -> Result<i32, std::num::ParseIntError> {
    s.trim().parse()
}

fn main() {
    match parse_number("42") {
        Ok(n) => println!("Parsed: {n}"),
        Err(e) => println!("Error: {e}"),
    }

    // ? operator — propagate errors
    fn add_strings(a: &str, b: &str) -> Result<i32, std::num::ParseIntError> {
        let x: i32 = a.trim().parse()?;  // return Err if fails
        let y: i32 = b.trim().parse()?;
        Ok(x + y)
    }
}

Collections

use std::collections::HashMap;

fn main() {
    // Vec — dynamic array
    let mut v: Vec<i32> = Vec::new();
    v.push(1);
    v.push(2);
    v.push(3);

    // Iterate
    for n in &v { print!("{n} "); }

    // Useful methods
    v.retain(|x| *x > 1);  // remove elements
    let sum: i32 = v.iter().sum();
    let doubled: Vec<i32> = v.iter().map(|x| x * 2).collect();

    // HashMap
    let mut scores: HashMap<String, u32> = HashMap::new();
    scores.insert(String::from("Alice"), 95);
    scores.insert(String::from("Bob"), 87);

    // Only insert if not present
    scores.entry(String::from("Alice")).or_insert(100);

    // Lookup
    if let Some(score) = scores.get("Alice") {
        println!("Alice: {score}");
    }

    // Iterate
    for (name, score) in &scores {
        println!("{name}: {score}");
    }
}

Cargo: Package Manager

# Cargo.toml
[package]
name = "my_app"
version = "0.1.0"
edition = "2021"

[dependencies]
serde = { version = "1.0", features = ["derive"] }
serde_json = "1.0"
tokio = { version = "1", features = ["full"] }
reqwest = { version = "0.12", features = ["json"] }
anyhow = "1.0"
clap = { version = "4.0", features = ["derive"] }

cargo add serde --features derive    # add dependency
cargo update                         # update dependencies
cargo test                           # run tests
cargo bench                          # run benchmarks
cargo doc --open                     # generate and open docs
cargo clippy                         # linting
cargo fmt                            # auto-format

Getting Started Roadmap

  1. Read the first 8 chapters of The Rust Book (free at doc.rust-lang.org)
  2. Complete Rustlings — interactive exercises
  3. Build a CLI tool with clap
  4. Write a REST API with axum
  5. Contribute to an open-source Rust project

Rust’s learning curve is real but the payoff is permanent. Once you internalize ownership and borrowing, you will write safer, faster code in every language. The Rust ecosystem in 2026 is mature enough for web servers, CLIs, embedded, and WebAssembly.

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