On Friday, 10 July 2020 at 19:23:57 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
It's not linear over the size of the list, it's linear over the
size of the range.
If you are always removing 1 element, it's effectively O(1).
-Steve
I see. Thanks!
On 7/10/20 3:08 PM, Ogi wrote:
auto list = DList!int([1, 2, 3, 4]);
list.remove(list[].find(2).take(1));
Error: function std.container.dlist.DList!int.DList.remove(Range r) is
not callable using argument types (Take!(Range))
It works if I replace `remove` with `linearRemove`, but that
auto list = DList!int([1, 2, 3, 4]);
list.remove(list[].find(2).take(1));
Error: function
std.container.dlist.DList!int.DList.remove(Range r) is not
callable using argument types (Take!(Range))
It works if I replace `remove` with `linearRemove`, but that
defeats the whole purpose of using a