On 14.06.2012 21:43, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Thursday, June 14, 2012 21:27:58 Dmitry Olshansky wrote:
On 14.06.2012 20:32, Roman D. Boiko wrote:
On Thursday, 14 June 2012 at 16:24:43 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Thursday, June 14, 2012 17:32:03 Roman D. Boiko wrote:
I don't know how to put a variable of type float to the heap

auto f = new float;
*f = 2.1;

- Jonathan M Davis

Except for immutable I would need to cast when passing into a function.
That's dangerous, given that *f might be changed later. But looks like
Timon's suggestion from my other question should work.

immutable a = [2.1].ptr;

That or pack the logic into a pure function, e.g. this should work:

immutable ap = newPureFloat(3.1415);

float* newPureFloat(float val)pure
{
float* p = new float;
*p = val;
return p;
}

Yeah, I was just thinking that maybe we should make a generic function for
this and add it to Phobos. Something like

auto makePtr(T, U)(U value) if(is(U : T)) {}
auto makePtr(T, Args...)(Args args) {}

I think make new would be more self-explanatory. Ptr doesn't imply heap.
Other then this, it looks useful.
(I'd love to see an optional allocator parameter... but have to wait I guess)

where the first one works with primitive types and the second one works with
structs. Then you could do

auto f = makePtr!(immutable float)(2.1);

I think that I'll have to see about throwing together something like that
tonight and create a pull request.

- Jonathan M Davis


--
Dmitry Olshansky

Reply via email to