On Sunday, 10 June 2018 at 01:35:40 UTC, cc wrote:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 14:11:13 UTC, evilrat wrote:
However steam devs decided to shield actual pointer and return
pointer sized integer when C API is used(or they just screw
up?). Anyway, the pointers for subsystems returned by context
On Sunday, 10 June 2018 at 01:27:50 UTC, bauss wrote:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 12:40:07 UTC, RealProgrammer wrote:
maybe you and others in the D 'community' should start paying
attention to the 'opinions' of those who do professional
development with professional compilers.
I do
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 14:11:13 UTC, evilrat wrote:
However steam devs decided to shield actual pointer and return
pointer sized integer when C API is used(or they just screw
up?). Anyway, the pointers for subsystems returned by context
calls on C++ API and mirrored C API calls are
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 12:40:07 UTC, RealProgrammer wrote:
maybe you and others in the D 'community' should start paying
attention to the 'opinions' of those who do professional
development with professional compilers.
I do professional work with a professional compiler aka. The D
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 15:11:02 UTC, Computermatronic wrote:
I'd like to create a bunch of tasks in vibe.d, then wait for
them all to complete.
Using std.concurrency and std.parallelism this is trivial.
I could just spawn a bunch of vibe.d tasks and then iteratively
join them, but I
On 06/09/2018 02:09 PM, OlegZ wrote:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 20:55:21 UTC, drug wrote:
In fact using `=>` you really define a function returning delegate.
I see. Thanks.
There is some explanation at the following page, of how the lambda
syntax is related to the full syntax:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 20:55:21 UTC, drug wrote:
In fact using `=>` you really define a function returning
delegate.
I see. Thanks.
On 09.06.2018 23:39, OlegZ wrote:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 20:03:15 UTC, OlegZ wrote:
auto hz = (string s) => { writeln( s ); return cast( int )s.length; }
How I should to write lambda of type "int delegate( string )?
I found one way:
auto hz = delegate int( string s ) { writeln( s );
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 20:03:15 UTC, OlegZ wrote:
auto hz = (string s) => { writeln( s ); return cast( int
)s.length; }
How I should to write lambda of type "int delegate( string )?
I found one way:
auto hz = delegate int( string s ) { writeln( s ); return cast(
int )s.length; };
but
I want "int delegate( string )", but hz most probably is "int
function( string )"
auto hz = (string s) => { writeln( s ); return cast( int
)s.length; };
but
pragma (msg, typeid( (string s) => { writeln( s ); return cast(
int )s.length; }));
shows
typeid( int delegate() @safe function(string
On Friday, 8 June 2018 at 18:18:27 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Thursday, June 07, 2018 22:43:50 aliak via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
On Thursday, 7 June 2018 at 21:32:54 UTC, Jonathan M Davis
wrote:
> [...]
Is that supposed to compile? -> https://run.dlang.io/is/SjUEOu
Error: cannot use
I'd like to create a bunch of tasks in vibe.d, then wait for them
all to complete.
Using std.concurrency and std.parallelism this is trivial.
I could just spawn a bunch of vibe.d tasks and then iteratively
join them, but I would think vibe.d would provide some primitives
for task-pooling.
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 03:14:13 UTC, cc wrote:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 03:07:39 UTC, cc wrote:
I've put together a simplified test program here (124KB):
Here is a pastebin of the D source file updated with some
additional comments at the end with the callback class
definitions from
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 13:49:48 UTC, 12345swordy wrote:
No, because you been caught making imposter accounts left and
right. Which btw we can tell as your poor attempts to imposter
me.
Well... why ya all r busy havin a go at me, the bugs remains (as
do all D'other bugs).
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 13:24:49 UTC, KingJoffrey wrote:
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 12:56:55 UTC, rikki cattermole
wrote:
But unlike you "king", Bauss isn't using tor to ban evade.
why you wanna ban little old me?
is it cause I made a crticism of D?
No, because you been caught making
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 12:56:55 UTC, rikki cattermole wrote:
But unlike you "king", Bauss isn't using tor to ban evade.
why you wanna ban little old me?
is it cause I made a crticism of D?
did i hurt your feelings?
..and everyone I know uses tor - and you should too - whether
you're
But unlike you "king", Bauss isn't using tor to ban evade.
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 11:47:54 UTC, bauss wrote:
Nobody cares about your opinion.
Nobody is forcing you to write code like that.
In fact most programs will be written without such code, for
good reason.
Regardless if it does the "correct" thing or not.
Dude. That response is so
On Saturday, 9 June 2018 at 09:24:48 UTC, KingJoffrey wrote:
On Thursday, 7 June 2018 at 21:57:17 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
Yep, long-standing issue:
https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2947
Almost a decade old!
-Steve
Another reason why I still refuse to bring my code to D.
On Friday, 8 June 2018 at 05:00:57 UTC, TheGag96 wrote:
I'm sorry about bringing this into here instead of DWT's
subforum, but it's somewhat dead and hasn't been getting a lot
of attention. I decided to finally play around with DWT today
and tried to build the example.
It's a known bug. I
On Thursday, 7 June 2018 at 21:57:17 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
Yep, long-standing issue:
https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2947
Almost a decade old!
-Steve
Another reason why I still refuse to bring my code to D.
As if the module not respecting class encapsulation was not
On Friday, 8 June 2018 at 05:00:57 UTC, TheGag96 wrote:
I'm sorry about bringing this into here instead of DWT's
subforum, but it's somewhat dead and hasn't been getting a lot
of attention. I decided to finally play around with DWT today
and tried to build the example. I got this:
Performing
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