Sergey Gromov Wrote: > In D2, 'in' means 'const scope'. I've seen that in writing but can't > remember where.
How can it be scope? If you have scope object, it gets *destructed* when leaving scope: when function exits. Ouch.
Sergey Gromov Wrote: > In D2, 'in' means 'const scope'. I've seen that in writing but can't > remember where.
How can it be scope? If you have scope object, it gets *destructed* when leaving scope: when function exits. Ouch.