On Monday 21 September 2015 22:33, Jack Stouffer wrote: > import std.range; > > void main() { > int[6] a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]; > > pragma(msg, isInputRange!(typeof(a))); > pragma(msg, isForwardRange!(typeof(a))); > pragma(msg, isRandomAccessRange!(typeof(a))); > } > > $ dmd -run test.d > false > false > false > > That's ridiculous. Do I have to wrap my static arrays in structs > to get range primitives?
You can just slice them: `a[]` is an `int[]` which is a range. > Is there an actual reason for this? How would popFront work on an `int[6]`? popFront can't change the type, but it must remove an element.