On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 07:36:09 UTC, Rob T wrote:
On Monday, 17 December 2012 at 04:40:39 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
First, please take all Derelict trouble-shooting problems to
the Derelict forums[1].
I'm posting here because I was unable to register with the
derelict forum.
I
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 08:14:01 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 07:36:09 UTC, Rob T wrote:
On Monday, 17 December 2012 at 04:40:39 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
First, please take all Derelict trouble-shooting problems to
the Derelict forums[1].
I'm posting here
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 07:36:09 UTC, Rob T wrote:
On Monday, 17 December 2012 at 04:40:39 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
First, please take all Derelict trouble-shooting problems to
the Derelict forums[1].
I'm posting here because I was unable to register with the
derelict forum.
I
Hi! In the beginning, sorry for my very bad English (and,
perhaps, for stupid idea too) :) I hope we'll find common
language :)
I don't program with D a lot, but when I try to find information
in google, I use that way:
dlang something. And google very often tries to change it to
slang
12/18/2012 1:47 PM, egslava пишет:
Hi! In the beginning, sorry for my very bad English (and, perhaps, for
stupid idea too) :) I hope we'll find common language :)
Hi!
I think, it would more better, if D had official phrase for searchings.
For example:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 09:47:24 UTC, egslava wrote:
I don't program with D a lot, but when I try to find
information in google, I use that way:
dlang something. And google very often tries to change it to
slang something :)
But I think, today, it's the best way. Because you can't look
d coder:
template Tuple(T...) {
alias T Tuple;
}
enum Bar;
class Foo {
@Bar int a;
}
void main()
{
Foo foo = new Foo;
alias Tuple!(__traits(getAttributes, foo.a)) tp;
pragma(msg, tp);
}
As first step, don't use that Tuple, use std.typetuple.TypeTuple
instead. It's the same, but
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 06:34:55 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
I don't think this is well known at all. :) I have thought
about these myself and came up with some guidelines at
http://ddili.org/ders/d.en
Thanks - I will study it. I see that you have covered also in,
out, inout, lazy,
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 11:06:12 UTC, d coder wrote:
Greetings
Somebody please help me understand why we need the Tuple
template in the
following code. Does not __traits(getAttributes, foo.a) return
a tuple? So
what is the Tuple template doing here? Converting a tuple to a
tuple?
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 11:39:29 UTC, Nekroze wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 09:47:24 UTC, egslava wrote:
I don't program with D a lot, but when I try to find
information in google, I use that way:
dlang something. And google very often tries to change it to
slang something :)
On 12/18/2012 08:12 AM, egslava wrote:
For example, I try to use that phrase:
d programming language sha256
I needed only sha-256 library for my course work. Only. Don't ask me why :)
And I really don't know: is there RIGHT library or not? And there are a
lot of noise in google results.
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 07:36:09 UTC, Rob T wrote:
On Monday, 17 December 2012 at 04:40:39 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
First, please take all Derelict trouble-shooting problems to
the Derelict forums[1].
I'm posting here because I was unable to register with the
derelict forum.
I
Wouldn't one just use OpenSSL?
I just looked for something simple like:
auto sha = sha256_digest(blah);
FYI - I search for d language something.
And I couldn't find that easily :( I found some library, but I
had been modificating that about two hours.
But, please, ask me. Is it hard to add
On 12/18/2012 04:51 AM, Dan wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 06:34:55 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
I don't think this is well known at all. :) I have thought about these
myself and came up with some guidelines at http://ddili.org/ders/d.en
Thanks - I will study it. I see that you have
maarten van damme:
How can this be?
Maybe there are some mistakes in your assumptions.
Bye,
bearophilwe
On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 01:51:31PM +0100, Dan wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 06:34:55 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
[...]
That makes a difference whether V is a value type or not. (It is
not clear whether you mean V is a value type.) Otherwise, e.g.
immutable(char[]) v has a legitimate
Hi, I'm trying to get a hello world going to call a C function from
[1]glib. I'm having problems compiling, what would the correct command
line options?
% dmd -I/usr/include/glib-2.0 hello.d -L-L/usr/local/lib -L-lglib-2.0
hello.d(3): Error: undefined identifier GDateTime
hello.d(3): Error:
On Tue, Dec 18, 2012, at 22:39, Nekroze wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 09:47:24 UTC, egslava wrote:
I don't program with D a lot, but when I try to find
information in google, I use that way:
dlang something. And google very often tries to change it to
slang something :)
But I
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 18:08:18 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
It's not just about whether the function mutates something or
not.
Sometimes the function counts on the data not changing, ever.
For
example, if you're implementing a library AA type, you'd want
the key to
be immutable so that
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 13:47:43 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
I *think* I've got it sorted. If you try again, it should work.
I tried it again just now and it worked. Thanks!
--rt
My only assumption is that -version=runtime doesn't utilize ctfe and
the other does. The rest is simple timing on both linux and windows
and ctfe is way slower...
2012/12/18 bearophile bearophileh...@lycos.com:
maarten van damme:
How can this be?
Maybe there are some mistakes in your
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 18:24:03 UTC, Sonia Hamilton
wrote:
[1]glib. I'm having problems compiling, what would the correct
command
line options?
% dmd -I/usr/include/glib-2.0 hello.d -L-L/usr/local/lib
-L-lglib-2.0
hello.d(3): Error: undefined identifier GDateTime
hello.d(3):
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 19:21:09 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 18:24:03 UTC, Sonia Hamilton
wrote:
[1]glib. I'm having problems compiling, what would the correct
command
line options?
% dmd -I/usr/include/glib-2.0 hello.d -L-L/usr/local/lib
-L-lglib-2.0
- Original Message -
Greetings!
I have this program that zips a file and everything works perfectly, if
the files are small enough. But, I am having to zip files that are
getting more and more extreme in size and I am running out of memory.
Here is the output when executing a
On 12/18/12 20:23, Mike Parker wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 19:21:09 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 18:24:03 UTC, Sonia Hamilton wrote:
[1]glib. I'm having problems compiling, what would the correct command
line options?
% dmd -I/usr/include/glib-2.0
Yes, I know it, but I didn't suppose to rename the language :)
No! No, no, no! :)
I supposed to all d users just add some tag for their libraries.
It's simple. It doesn't require change the name of the language.
It doesn't change something, except few lines of your CMS code :(
Really, why
On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 4:47 AM, egslava egsl...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi! In the beginning, sorry for my very bad English (and, perhaps, for
stupid idea too) :) I hope we'll find common language :)
I don't program with D a lot, but when I try to find information in
google, I use that way:
dlang
I often search libraries on Github — it allows to filter results
by language, and probably most D libraries are anyway hosted
there.
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 00:29:56 UTC, Jeremy DeHaan wrote:
I was playing with unicode strings the other day, and have been
searching for a way to correctly write unicode to the console.
If I try something like:
dstring String = さいごの果実;
writeln(String);
All I get is a
On Monday, 10 December 2012 at 14:43:08 UTC, Regan Heath wrote:
Ahh, of course. Now I'm having linking issues :p
I'm using VisualD and I've added odbc32.lib to the right place,
but some symbols are still missing - specifically the W
versions. I've dumped the symbols in the DMC odbc32.lib
On Tuesday, 18 December 2012 at 00:29:56 UTC, Jeremy DeHaan wrote:
I was playing with unicode strings the other day, and have been
searching for a way to correctly write unicode to the console.
If I try something like:
dstring String = さいごの果実;
writeln(String);
All I get is a
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