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Usb-firmware-tool-alcor-au6366-au6371.epub [Updated]



 


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However, it seems like there are other people that have problems with their Acer Aspire One 500e, too. They installed the newest firmware version, but also got stuck on step 5: Source: XDA Developers and XDA-Devs Devs are reporting problems with different versions of the firmware: Source: XDA Developers The developers recommend the older version of the firmware, to avoid problems with the online update: You can find all the latest tips and workarounds in the thread over at XDA-Devs. Do you have problems with your Acer Aspire One 500e? Do you know any good tools or tricks? UPDATE:Q: How to create a closure that captures local variables? I'm using Rust for the first time, and I'm attempting to do something like the following (without needing to use the keyword let). fn get_str() -> i32 { let mut str = String::new(); // Capture str local variable println!("{}", str); 1 } fn main() { println!("{}", get_str()); This compiles fine, but fails at runtime: error[E0597]: `str` does not live long enough --> src/main.rs:6:9 | 6 | // Capture str local variable | println!("{}", str); 7 | 1 | - `str` dropped here while still borrowed ... I understand that this is not legal, as str doesn't exist in the outer scope, but I also understand that in this case str will be moved into get_str when it returns (i.e. it will still exist in the inner scope). What is the correct way to do this? A: I think you can make the closure generic over the return type by using Return, a generic type parameter for the closure: fn get_str() -> T {

 

 


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Usb-firmware-tool-alcor-au6366-au6371.epub [Updated]

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