# Rust style editions The default Rust style evolves over time, as Rust does. However, to avoid breaking established code style, and CI jobs checking code style, changes to the default Rust style only appear in *style editions*. Code written in a given [Rust edition](https://doc.rust-lang.org/edition-guide/) uses the corresponding Rust style edition by default. To make it easier to migrate code style separately from the semantic changes between Rust editions, formatting tools such as `rustfmt` allow updating the style edition separately from the Rust edition. The current version of the style guide describes the latest Rust style edition. Each distinct past style will have a corresponding archived version of the style guide. Note that archived versions of the style guide do not document formatting for newer Rust constructs that did not exist at the time that version of the style guide was archived. However, each style edition will still format all constructs valid in that Rust edition, with the style of newer constructs coming from the first subsequent style edition providing formatting rules for that construct (without any of the systematic/global changes from that style edition). Not all Rust editions have corresponding changes to the Rust style. For instance, Rust 2015, Rust 2018, and Rust 2021 all use the same style edition. ## Rust 2024 style edition This style guide describes the Rust 2024 style edition. The Rust 2024 style edition is currently nightly-only and may change before the release of Rust 2024. For a full history of changes in the Rust 2024 style edition, see the git history of the style guide. Notable changes in the Rust 2024 style edition include: - Miscellaneous `rustfmt` bugfixes. ## Rust 2015/2018/2021 style edition The archived version of the style guide at describes the style edition corresponding to Rust 2015, Rust 2018, and Rust 2021.