On 2013-08-30 09:39, eles wrote:
On Linux 64
$chmod +x htest
$cat ./htest
#!/usr/bin/env rdmd
import std.stdio;
void main() {
writeln("hello world!");
}
then:
$./htest
Error: cannot read file ./htest.d
Failed: 'dmd' '-v' '-o-' './htest.d' '-I.'
OTOH:
$cp htest htest.d
$./htest.d
hello world!
It seems that rdmd expects the script to bear the .d extension. This is
not a very good choice, at least when writing git helper scripts.
For example, a "$git command" command would eventually try to execute
the executable (script):
$git-command
The problem is that that line expects git-command, not git-command.d.
A workaround for this?
Why don't just compile it manually once instead of using like a script?
--
/Jacob Carlborg