On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 10:24:53 UTC, Dennis wrote:
It has been fixed, but you'll need to update to 2.104.0 which
is currently in beta.
Confirmed. installed 2.104.0-beta.1 and everything's now back to
normal.
Thank you.
-- anonymouse
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 05:01:44 UTC, anonymouse wrote:
This is a macOS issue. Don't know if it's specific to Ventura
but I just loaded up a Debian VM and it runs as expected.
Indeed. Apparently Apple changed their floating point parsing
function in their C runtime library, causing dmd to fai
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 04:31:37 UTC, anonymouse wrote:
As for the version of D I'm using, according to ```dmd
--version``` it is none other than
DMD64 D Compiler v2.103.0
Not sure if it makes a difference but I'm using MacOS Ventura.
This is a macOS issue. Don't know if it's specific to
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 04:31:37 UTC, anonymouse wrote:
```
As for the version of D I'm using, according to ```dmd
--version``` it is none other than
DMD64 D Compiler v2.103.0
Not sure if it makes a difference but I'm using MacOS Ventura.
Removed and install v2.103.1, but experiencing the
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 04:13:11 UTC, NonNull wrote:
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 03:22:02 UTC, anonymouse wrote:
Never thought I'd have to do this but, in Python:
```Python
pow(1/2, 3)
```
output:
```
0.125
```
in D:
```D
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
writeln((1/2)^^3);
}
Using DMD64 D Co
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 03:22:02 UTC, anonymouse wrote:
Never thought I'd have to do this but, in Python:
```Python
pow(1/2, 3)
```
output:
```
0.125
```
in D:
```D
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
writeln((1/2)^^3);
}
Using DMD64 D Compiler v2.103.0:
The above program ran and output ```0
On Monday, 8 May 2023 at 03:22:02 UTC, anonymouse wrote:
Sorry, I thought I was already in the Learn forum. Please move
there if possible.
I'm not the sharpest tool in the shed so I would really
appreciate some assistance clarifying what's going on here and
how to accomplish this seemingly simple (to me) goal.
I'd like to raise a floating point value ```d``` to some exponent
```n```.
Never thought I'd have to do this but, in Py