On Sunday, 15 April 2018 at 12:04:19 UTC, vladdeSV wrote:
Hello people of D-land.

In a template function, I want to format all arguments as if it was an array. Se this snippet of code:

    foo(1,2,3);

    void foo(T...)(T args)
    {
        writefln("expected: %s", [1,2,3]);
        writefln("actual: %s", args);
    }

The code above will output

    expected: [1, 2, 3]
    actual: 1

How would I go on about to print all the arguments as I expected it, using "%s"?

Best regards,
Vladimirs Nordholm

---

P.S.
I do not understand why only a `1` is printed in the actual result.

If you define foo like that, then, you advice D to handle the input as separate objects. That's ok. But then, you have to define that you still assume, they belong together, like an array.

In this example the solution is simple:

´´´
void main()
{
        foo(1,2,3);
}

void foo(T...)(T args)
{
        import std.stdio : writefln;
        import std.range : only;

    writefln("expected: %s", [1,2,3]);
    writefln("actual: %s", args.only);
}
´´´
However, there will be problems, if the types of elements differs: While the template foo will be able to handle this, the std.range : only function won't. It assumes at least something common across them.

https://dlang.org/library/std/range/only.html

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