On 02/16/2012 03:10 PM, James Miller wrote:
I'm not sure what you are talking about, maybe explaining the terms
and concreting down what you mean would help. Try posting a code
example, demonstrating what you mean, rather than just throwing words
around.
There are various reasons why imports work they way they do, one of
which is that D is supposed to be friendly to C/C++ programmers, so
`import` behaves, on the surface, like `#include`.
It does not at all in this case.
Consider the following directory structure:
- a.cpp
+ b
- a.cpp
- a.h
$ cat a.cpp
#include "b/a.h"
$ cat b/a.h
void someusefulfunction();
$ gcc a.cpp -c
$ ls
a.cpp a.o
If you want to only use the fully qualified names, just use `static
import`, as far as I can tell, that is exactly what you want.
--
James Miller
Static import does not help.