Is the use of .di depreceated ?

2012-04-18 Thread Erèbe

Hi,

I recently discovered that D support file interface .di, but 
through my past reads I never seen someone using it. The std 
don't do usage of it (compile time issue maybe ?) and most of D 
project are in the same case.


Is this feature depreceated ?

I'm from a C++ background, I agree on the fact that keeping 
declarations and implementaions sync across two files is tedious, 
but when I have to read code, I like a clean interface to 
summarize the thing.


Dmd doc is there to replace the need of an clean interface ?




Re: Is the use of .di depreceated ?

2012-04-18 Thread Robert Clipsham

On 18/04/2012 09:18, "Erèbe" wrote:

Hi,

I recently discovered that D support file interface .di, but through my
past reads I never seen someone using it. The std don't do usage of it
(compile time issue maybe ?) and most of D project are in the same case.

Is this feature depreceated ?

I'm from a C++ background, I agree on the fact that keeping declarations
and implementaions sync across two files is tedious, but when I have to
read code, I like a clean interface to summarize the thing.

Dmd doc is there to replace the need of an clean interface ?


You can find a list of deprecated features here:

http://dlang.org/deprecate

.di files are not deprecated, just rarely used. This is for a few reasons:
 * There is no requirement to use them
 * They severely limit the capabilities of CTFE 
(http://dlang.org/function#interpretation)
 * DMD is really fast - the speed gain from using .di files isn't 
noticeable for a lot of projects
 * If you want them, they're very easy to generate yourself (use the 
-Dd and -Df compiler switches)
 * For the purposes of reading APIs, DDoc is normally used - 
alternatively, all good editors and IDEs provide code folding to hide 
implementations



--
Robert
http://octarineparrot.com/


Re: Is the use of .di depreceated ?

2012-04-18 Thread Erèbe
On Wednesday, 18 April 2012 at 10:02:49 UTC, Robert Clipsham 
wrote:

On 18/04/2012 09:18, "Erèbe" wrote:

Hi,

I recently discovered that D support file interface .di, but 
through my
past reads I never seen someone using it. The std don't do 
usage of it
(compile time issue maybe ?) and most of D project are in the 
same case.


Is this feature depreceated ?

I'm from a C++ background, I agree on the fact that keeping 
declarations
and implementaions sync across two files is tedious, but when 
I have to

read code, I like a clean interface to summarize the thing.

Dmd doc is there to replace the need of an clean interface ?


You can find a list of deprecated features here:

http://dlang.org/deprecate

.di files are not deprecated, just rarely used. This is for a 
few reasons:

 * There is no requirement to use them
 * They severely limit the capabilities of CTFE 
(http://dlang.org/function#interpretation)
 * DMD is really fast - the speed gain from using .di files 
isn't noticeable for a lot of projects
 * If you want them, they're very easy to generate yourself 
(use the -Dd and -Df compiler switches)
 * For the purposes of reading APIs, DDoc is normally used - 
alternatively, all good editors and IDEs provide code folding 
to hide implementations


Thanks, CTFE  is a good argument for me


Re: Is the use of .di depreceated ?

2012-04-23 Thread Adam Wilson
On Wed, 18 Apr 2012 03:02:49 -0700, Robert Clipsham  
 wrote:



On 18/04/2012 09:18, "Erèbe" wrote:

Hi,

I recently discovered that D support file interface .di, but through my
past reads I never seen someone using it. The std don't do usage of it
(compile time issue maybe ?) and most of D project are in the same case.

Is this feature depreceated ?

I'm from a C++ background, I agree on the fact that keeping declarations
and implementaions sync across two files is tedious, but when I have to
read code, I like a clean interface to summarize the thing.

Dmd doc is there to replace the need of an clean interface ?


You can find a list of deprecated features here:

http://dlang.org/deprecate

.di files are not deprecated, just rarely used. This is for a few  
reasons:

  * There is no requirement to use them
  * They severely limit the capabilities of CTFE  
(http://dlang.org/function#interpretation)
  * DMD is really fast - the speed gain from using .di files isn't  
noticeable for a lot of projects
  * If you want them, they're very easy to generate yourself (use the  
-Dd and -Df compiler switches)
  * For the purposes of reading APIs, DDoc is normally used -  
alternatively, all good editors and IDEs provide code folding to hide  
implementations




Where DI files come in handy is for commercial libraries that don't want  
to hand out their source, without DI's that's impossible, therefore for D  
to be a commercially acceptable language, DI's must work, unfortunately,  
DI's do not auto-generate to the this requirement right now, I have a  
patch to fix that. But if you are OSS, you don't really care, just deliver  
the source as the "library".


--
Adam Wilson
IRC: LightBender
Project Coordinator
The Horizon Project
http://www.thehorizonproject.org/


Re: Is the use of .di depreceated ?

2012-04-23 Thread James Miller

On Tuesday, 24 April 2012 at 01:51:54 UTC, Adam Wilson wrote:
Where DI files come in handy is for commercial libraries that 
don't want to hand out their source, without DI's that's 
impossible, therefore for D to be a commercially acceptable 
language, DI's must work, unfortunately, DI's do not 
auto-generate to the this requirement right now, I have a patch 
to fix that. But if you are OSS, you don't really care, just 
deliver the source as the "library".


DI files are sufficiently auto generated now. Templated functions 
have to be part of the source code because, well, *they're 
templates* the compiler needs the source code. Otherwise .di 
files are just .d files with a different name, you can do forward 
declarations for defining the interface with a library, I've used 
it several times.


There is a build tool that will generate the interface files and 
use those when actually compiling in order to speed up 
compilation times when doing incremental compilation (don't have 
to parse as much code).


--
James Miller


Re: Is the use of .di depreceated ?

2012-04-23 Thread Paulo Pinto

On Tuesday, 24 April 2012 at 01:51:54 UTC, Adam Wilson wrote:
On Wed, 18 Apr 2012 03:02:49 -0700, Robert Clipsham 
 wrote:



On 18/04/2012 09:18, "Erèbe" wrote:

Hi,

I recently discovered that D support file interface .di, but 
through my
past reads I never seen someone using it. The std don't do 
usage of it
(compile time issue maybe ?) and most of D project are in the 
same case.


Is this feature depreceated ?

I'm from a C++ background, I agree on the fact that keeping 
declarations
and implementaions sync across two files is tedious, but when 
I have to

read code, I like a clean interface to summarize the thing.

Dmd doc is there to replace the need of an clean interface ?


You can find a list of deprecated features here:

http://dlang.org/deprecate

.di files are not deprecated, just rarely used. This is for a 
few reasons:

 * There is no requirement to use them
 * They severely limit the capabilities of CTFE 
(http://dlang.org/function#interpretation)
 * DMD is really fast - the speed gain from using .di files 
isn't noticeable for a lot of projects
 * If you want them, they're very easy to generate yourself 
(use the -Dd and -Df compiler switches)
 * For the purposes of reading APIs, DDoc is normally used - 
alternatively, all good editors and IDEs provide code folding 
to hide implementations




Where DI files come in handy is for commercial libraries that 
don't want to hand out their source, without DI's that's 
impossible, therefore for D to be a commercially acceptable 
language, DI's must work, unfortunately, DI's do not 
auto-generate to the this requirement right now, I have a patch 
to fix that. But if you are OSS, you don't really care, just 
deliver the source as the "library".


D could see use an approach similar to what Delphi does, where 
the tooling is able to extract the information from the .tpu 
files (delphi libraries), as far as I can remember. Go has a 
similar approach where the package information is stored in a 
special section in the library/object files.


But I guess di files are anyway easier to maintain.