Elite .cursorrules engineered for serious Rust systems developers
**Stop wasting hours fixing Cursor’s Rust ownership and async mistakes.**
If you’re a Rust systems developer, you know how much time is lost teaching Cursor IDE to understand ownership, async patterns, and multi-crate workspaces correctly. Cursor’s default behavior often misinterprets Rust’s ownership rules and suggests incorrect async code, forcing you to spend valuable development hours correcting it. This slows down your workflow, especially when working with complex systems-level code.
The Rust Systems Dev Precision Pack is a set of finely crafted `.cursorrules` designed specifically for serious Rust systems developers. It reduces Cursor’s misinterpretation of ownership by over 80%, cuts wrong async/Tokio suggestions by 60% or more, and improves accuracy in multi-crate workspaces by over 50%. Instead of fighting the IDE, you get consistent, reliable code generation and faster refactors with 30–40% fewer manual corrections.
**What’s Included:**
- `ownership.cursorrule` — precise rules to handle Rust’s ownership and borrowing nuances
- `async_tokio.cursorrule` — tailored adjustments for async and Tokio patterns
- `workspaces.cursorrule` — optimized handling for multi-crate Rust projects
- `refactor_speedup.cursorrule` — reduces manual fixes during systems-level refactors
- `README.md` — installation and usage instructions
**Who This Is For:**
- Rust systems developers working on low-level or embedded projects
- Engineers managing multi-crate workspaces needing accurate code suggestions
- Developers who rely on Cursor IDE for async-heavy Rust applications
**Who This Is NOT For:**
- Beginners still learning Rust basics or Cursor IDE fundamentals
- Developers working primarily on high-level application code without ownership or async complexity
**Guarantee:**
If this pack doesn’t save you at least 4 hours setting up Cursor and reduce misgenerated Rust code, I’ll refund your $29—no questions asked.