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13 changes: 5 additions & 8 deletions src/doc/trpl/compound-data-types.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -263,15 +263,12 @@ let four_is_smaller = four <= ten;
let four_equals_ten = four == ten;
```

This may seem rather limiting, particularly equality being invalid; in
many cases however, it's unnecessary. Rust provides the [`match`][match]
keyword, which will be examined in more detail in the next section, which
often allows better and easier branch control than a series of `if`/`else`
statements would. However, for our [game][game] we need the comparisons
to work so we will utilize the `Ordering` `enum` provided by the standard
library which supports such comparisons. It has this form:
This may seem rather limiting, but it's a limitation which we can overcome.
There are two ways: by implementing equality ourselves, or by using the
[`match`][match] keyword. We don't know enough about Rust to implement equality
yet, but we can use the `Ordering` enum from the standard library, which does:

```{rust}
```
enum Ordering {
Less,
Equal,
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