Thank you
On 5 April 2016 at 15:47, Josh Langsfeld wrote:
> This is noted in the docs. See a few paragraphs down, "When a type is
> applied like a function..."
>
> http://docs.julialang.org/en/release-0.4/manual/types/#composite-types
>
> On Tuesday, April 5, 2016 at 10:19:05
This is noted in the docs. See a few paragraphs down, "When a type is
applied like a function..."
http://docs.julialang.org/en/release-0.4/manual/types/#composite-types
On Tuesday, April 5, 2016 at 10:19:05 AM UTC-4, FANG Colin wrote:
>
> methods(TT)
>
> call(::Type{TT}, x::Float64,
Yes, I guess.
call(TT, 1, 2)
call(TT, 'a', 'b')
On Tuesday, April 5, 2016 at 4:19:05 PM UTC+2, FANG Colin wrote:
>
> methods(TT)
>
> call(::Type{TT}, x::Float64, y::Float64) at In[22]:2
> call(::Type{TT}, x, y) at In[22]:2
> call{T}(::Type{T}, arg) at essentials.jl:56
methods(TT)
call(::Type{TT}, x::Float64, y::Float64) at In[22]:2
call(::Type{TT}, x, y) at In[22]:2
call{T}(::Type{T}, arg) at essentials.jl:56
call{T}(::Type{T}, args...) at essentials.jl:57
So I guess the rule is applied in call(::Type{TT}, x, y)
What does it do? Does it try to
On Tue, Apr 5, 2016 at 10:09 AM, FANG Colin wrote:
> Sorry if this has been discussed somewhere as I am unable to find the
> relative post.
>
> immutable TT
> x::Float64
> y::Float64
> end
>
> function tt(x::Float64, y::Float64)
> x + y
>
> end
> tt(1,2) # doesn't
Sorry if this has been discussed somewhere as I am unable to find the
relative post.
immutable TT
x::Float64
y::Float64
end
function tt(x::Float64, y::Float64)
x + y
end
tt(1,2) # doesn't work
TT(1,2) # works
What rule applies here for TT(1,2)?