I ran the following experiment:

mkdir deleteme
cd deleteme
mkdir std
touch std/algorithm.d
echo 'import std.algorithm; void main(){int a, b;swap(a,b);}' >main.d
dmd main

The attempt to compile main fails with "undefined identifier swap", which means that the module I defined in the current directory successfully hijacked the one in the standard library.

The usual D spirit is that a symbol is searched exhaustively, and attempts at hijacking are denounced. In the module cases, it turns out that an entire module can successfully hijack another.

Walter and I are ambivalent about this. There has been no bug report so it seems like people didn't have a problem with things working as they are. But maybe they never hijacked, or maybe some did hijack.

Question: should we change this?


Andrei

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