@@ -247,28 +247,21 @@ impl<'a, T> IterMut<'a, T> {
247247 /// Basic usage:
248248 ///
249249 /// ```
250- /// // First, we declare a type which has `iter_mut` method to get the `IterMut`
251- /// // struct (`&[usize]` here):
250+ /// // First, we need a slice to call the `iter_mut` method on:
252251 /// let mut slice = &mut [1, 2, 3];
253252 ///
254- /// {
255- /// // Then, we get the iterator:
256- /// let mut iter = slice.iter_mut();
257- /// // We move to next element:
258- /// iter.next();
259- /// // So if we print what `into_slice` method returns here, we have "[2, 3]":
260- /// println!("{:?}", iter.into_slice());
261- /// }
262- ///
263- /// // Now let's modify a value of the slice:
264- /// {
265- /// // First we get back the iterator:
266- /// let mut iter = slice.iter_mut();
267- /// // We change the value of the first element of the slice returned by the `next` method:
268- /// *iter.next().unwrap() += 1;
269- /// }
270- /// // Now slice is "[2, 2, 3]":
271- /// println!("{slice:?}");
253+ /// // Then we call `iter_mut` on the slice to get the `IterMut` struct:
254+ /// let mut iter = slice.iter_mut();
255+ /// // Now, we call the `next` method to remove the first element of the iterator,
256+ /// // unwrap and dereference what we get from `next` and increase its value by 1:
257+ /// *iter.next().unwrap() += 1;
258+ /// // Here the iterator does not contain the first element of the slice any more,
259+ /// // so `into_slice` only returns the last two elements of the slice,
260+ /// // and so this prints "[2, 3]":
261+ /// println!("{:?}", iter.into_slice());
262+ /// // The underlying slice still contains three elements, but its first element
263+ /// // was increased by 1, so this prints "[2, 2, 3]":
264+ /// println!("{:?}", slice);
272265 /// ```
273266 #[ must_use = "`self` will be dropped if the result is not used" ]
274267 #[ stable( feature = "iter_to_slice" , since = "1.4.0" ) ]
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