On Friday, 20 October 2017 at 10:47:57 UTC, Andrew Edwards wrote:
Given a documented source file (eg. process.d), I can generate
the DDOC version of the documentation with the -D switch of DMD
as such:
$ dmd -Dfprocess.html process.d
What do I modify on that line to get the DDOX version o
On Sunday, 22 October 2017 at 15:21:37 UTC, Shriramana Sharma
wrote:
For my program right now I'm using a souped-up version using a
static array:
char[20] name = "/tmp/XX";
Hmm I was wondering if I needed it to be static, and verily,
substituting:
char[] name = "/tmp/XX".dup;
On Friday, 20 October 2017 at 10:47:57 UTC, Andrew Edwards wrote:
Given a documented source file (eg. process.d), I can generate
the DDOC version of the documentation with the -D switch of DMD
as such:
$ dmd -Dfprocess.html process.d
What do I modify on that line to get the DDOX version o
On Sunday, 22 October 2017 at 14:44:04 UTC, Timon Gehr wrote:
On 22.10.2017 16:20, Ilya Yaroshenko wrote:
.. i thought it should be (2 ^^ 1) ^^ 2 = 4
2 ^^ (1 ^^ 2) == 2
It is standard for ^/**/^^ to be right-associative. (This is
also the standard convention in mathematics.)
Yeah, and a he
On Sunday, October 22, 2017 15:21:37 Shriramana Sharma via Digitalmars-d-
learn wrote:
> On Saturday, 17 January 2015 at 17:16:41 UTC, Tobias Pankrath
>
> wrote:
> > You're looking for core.sys.posix.stdlib : mkstemp.
> >
> > I think that should be used by std.stdio.File as well, care to
> > create
On Sunday, 22 October 2017 at 14:44:04 UTC, Timon Gehr wrote:
On 22.10.2017 16:20, Ilya Yaroshenko wrote:
.. i thought it should be (2 ^^ 1) ^^ 2 = 4
2 ^^ (1 ^^ 2) == 2
It is standard for ^/**/^^ to be right-associative. (This is
also the standard convention in mathematics.)
true
On Saturday, 17 January 2015 at 17:16:41 UTC, Tobias Pankrath
wrote:
You're looking for core.sys.posix.stdlib : mkstemp.
I think that should be used by std.stdio.File as well, care to
create an enhancement request in bugzilla?
Though this thread is old, I ran into the issue when wanting to
c
On 22.10.2017 16:20, Ilya Yaroshenko wrote:
.. i thought it should be (2 ^^ 1) ^^ 2 = 4
2 ^^ (1 ^^ 2) == 2
It is standard for ^/**/^^ to be right-associative. (This is also the
standard convention in mathematics.)
.. i thought it should be (2 ^^ 1) ^^ 2 = 4
On Wednesday, 18 October 2017 at 15:39:43 UTC, Steven
Schveighoffer wrote:
On 10/18/17 1:40 AM, Tony wrote:
On Tuesday, 17 October 2017 at 13:27:24 UTC, Steven
Schveighoffer wrote:
I don't know what "allocations" represents, but reserve
actually calls gc_malloc, and the others do not (the s
10 matches
Mail list logo