diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index cc8b4b5..c3f29cb 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -8142,7 +8142,7 @@ fn main() { After `takes_a_string` takes `user_name`, you can't use it anymore. Here that is no problem: you can just give it `user_name.clone()`. But sometimes a variable is part of a struct, and maybe you can't clone the struct. Or maybe the `String` is really long and you don't want to clone it. These are some reasons for `Rc`, which lets you have more than one owner. An `Rc` is like a good office worker: `Rc` writes down who has ownership, and how many. Then once the number of owners goes down to 0, the variable can disappear. -Here's how you use an `Rc`. First imagine two structs: one called `City`, and another called `Cities`. `City` has information for one city, and `Cities` puts all the cities together in `Vec`s. +Here's how you use an `Rc`. First imagine two structs: one called `City`, and another called `CityData`. `City` has information for one city, and `CityData` puts all the cities together in `Vec`s. ```rust #[derive(Debug)] @@ -8213,7 +8213,7 @@ struct City { } #[derive(Debug)] -struct Cities { +struct CityData { names: Vec, histories: Vec>, }