On Saturday, June 16, 2018 22:59:24 DigitalDesigns via Digitalmars-d wrote: > On Saturday, 16 June 2018 at 06:47:59 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote: > > On Saturday, June 16, 2018 06:08:17 DigitalDesigns via > > > > Digitalmars-d wrote: > >> When an identifier starts with __, allMembers does not return > >> it. This is very bad behavior! It can silently create huge > >> problems if the programmer is not aware of the bug. > >> > >> Instead, if you want to keep the current behavior at least > >> create an error or warning rather than silently create a bug > >> to waste the users time tracking it down. > > > > I would point out that identifiers that start with two > > underscores are supposed to be reserved for the compiler. > > Declaring them yourself is begging for trouble in general. > > > > - Jonathan M Davis > > So, you are saying that it's ok to beat me over the head and > cause me trouble simply because I used __? Seriously? I thought D > was all about making the programmers life easier and not more > difficult! Thanks for letting me know! I guess it's time to go > back to C#.
There's no need to be melodramatic. All I'm saying is that identifiers starting with __ are reserved by the language - just like they are in many C-derived languages (I would expect them to be reserved in C# as well, though I don't know for sure if they are). Whether __traits stuff should ignore such attributes, I don't know (I wouldn't have expected them to be ignored, and that does seem weird), but either way, if you have any variable names that start with two underscores (be they member variables or local variables or whatever), you're potentially declaring variables that are in conflict with stuff that druntime or the compiler itself declare, and you risk bugs by doing so. Even if __traits shouldn't just ignore those identifiers, you shouldn't be declaring any variables that start with two underscores. If you didn't know that before, then I'm sorry, but the spec mentions it, and now you know. https://dlang.org/spec/lex.html#identifiers - Jonathan M Davis