On Friday, 24 February 2017 at 03:15:11 UTC, Jerry wrote:
You can use the C++ plugin, which provides a debugger. Just
make sure you aren't using optlink, I don't think it generates
compatible files. Also you might need to use "-gc" which
generates debug names to be in C format.
https://market
On Thursday, 23 February 2017 at 17:54:09 UTC, FR wrote:
gdb is in my path, I can run it from the command line. When I
run 'gdb test.exe' (test.exe being the binary placed in my
workspace folder), I get the error message "not in executable
format: File format not recognized", whether I build as
On Thursday, 23 February 2017 at 16:30:08 UTC, WebFreak001 wrote:
I don't know how to build mago-mi either, but you can obtain it
from the bundle with dlangide
https://github.com/buggins/dlangide/releases/download/v0.6.11/dlangide-v0_6_11-bin-win32_x86-magomi-v0_3_1.zip
Thanks, that got me som
Hi everyone,
as the subject says, I'm trying to get a debugger running with
visual studio code on windows.
I have installed WebFreak001's code-d and debug extensions but
fail to figure out how to install a working debugger. The gdb I
have installed is part of a MinGW installation and complains
On Monday, 7 July 2014 at 16:58:51 UTC, anonymous wrote:
No array is created in the example. Where do you think an array
is created?
It's in the example above :
SortedRange!(MyObject[]) opSlice() {
sequence[].array.assumeSorted; }
I thought that that using ".array" would lead to instantiati
Hi again,
The solution of making an array from the range works, but I'm
concerned about the cost of instantiating a (potentially very
large) array each time I need to walk across the set. Unless
doing that is costless in D for any reason, it does not seem
practical in my case.
And when tryi