On Monday, 15 October 2012 at 06:47:06 UTC, Jonathan M Davis
wrote:
On Sunday, October 14, 2012 23:40:41 H. S. Teoh wrote:
Funny, as soon as I said that, I manage to reproduce the same
error
messages (though I can't say if it's exactly the problem
you're seeing)
by compiling a file that doesn't define main(). In this case,
I had a
hello.d with main() renamed to Main():
Yes. The error message that he's getting is essentially the one
that you get
when you don't define main, which is weird, because he _is_
defining main. But I
don't know if it's exactly the same or not. A detailed
comparison of the error
messages that he's seeing and those that you get from not
defining main on a
machine that works would be required to see whether it's
exactly the same
message or not.
I'm surprised that you didn't recognize the errors immediately.
I guess that
you haven't missed main very often (I'm used to it primarily
from forgetting
main when throwing together quick test scripts). But I'm
totally stumped as to
why he'd be getting them, since he does appear to be declaring
main correctly.
- Jonathan M Davis
Hi,
I decided to install the same distribution in a vm. This time
instead of installing the .deb package, I went with the zip.
Everything seems to be working! I can compile a non-trivial
example just fine. I guess I'll definitely be using the zip from
now on. Anyway, I also tried the zip version on Mac and Windoze.
They both built the same code successfully. This is great! I can
finally try out all of those great language features I've been
reading about.
Thanks to everyone for pushing me down the rabbit hole far enough
this time to get some payback ;-) It's on now!
Thanks,
-G