On Monday, 12 May 2014 at 14:49:53 UTC, hane wrote:
and is there any way to sort char array with algorithm.sort?
---
import std.algorithm;
import std.range;

void main()
{
  int[] arr = [5, 3, 7];
  sort(arr); // OK

  char[] arr2 = ['z', 'g', 'c'];
  sort(arr2); // error
  sort!q{ a[0] > b[0] }(zip(arr, arr2)); // error
}
---
I don't know what's difference between int[] and char[] in D, but it's very unnatural.

char[] is a rather special type of array: the language has unicode support and iterates over it by code-point (i.e. not guaranteed to be a single char per iteration).

If you want to sort chars and are assuming ASCII, you can just use std.string.representation to work with them as integer types:

import std.algorithm;
import std.range;
import std.string;

void main()
{
  int[] arr = [5, 3, 7];
  sort(arr); // OK

  char[] arr2 = ['z', 'g', 'c'];
  sort(arr2.representation); // error
  sort!q{ a[0] > b[0] }(zip(arr, arr2.representation)); // error
}

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