On Saturday, 18 February 2017 at 22:17:30 UTC, berni wrote:
I'm new here too (never heard of D before 2017).

Glad to meet someone else new here! :-)

c). The whole community seems infused with both the Feminism/SJW

I didn't tried out Rust, but that would draw me away too. (Incidentally it was a comment on alternatives for Rust, that pointed me to D.)

Absolutely! At first it didn't bother me so much, but when I started hanging out of the Rust user groups, I saw the evil side of this. People who raised this issues were being castigated and publicly ridiculed. That was too much even for me (I'm usually the "live and let live" kind of person) because it showed that the community over there appeared more interested in such side issues than focusing on building up a community based on technical sharing and solving technical problems. Very offputting.

2. I am also curious as to what would be the best path for a complete beginner to D to learn it effectively?

I started with the online version of the book of Ali Çehreli but after a while I decided to buy it and was impressed on its size (more than 700 pages!). Meanwhile I'm halfway through.

Hehe. I'm also doing the same... a few chapters in and it's smooth sailing so far!

At the same time I'm working on a project of mine, which I just started writing in C++ last december, because I couldn't find a better language and thought I had to bite the bullet. Meanwhile it's completely rewritten in D (but two lines of C code that I need to use a C-libraray). Whenever I came across a new concept in the book I tried to refactor that project using this concept.

Very nice! :-)

This approach worked very well for me. (And I appreciate this Learn-forum, because else I'd not dare to ask my seemingly silly questions.)

You wrote:
... area thoroughly!The introspection ...

I just realised, how much I'm thinking in D allready when I saw this: At first glance I wondered, what this thoroughly-template is about... ;-)

Hahaha!

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