On Wednesday, 24 April 2019 at 05:22:35 UTC, Arjunkumar wrote:
I am title bit confuse about learning D Lang and is it well
good for future point of view. Currently in a market many of
language is present, so why people learn D Lang and any site
which provide best tutorials for D Lang?
Just fo
On Monday, 22 April 2019 at 16:24:53 UTC, Taylor Hillegeist wrote:
Or would this not be easy at all with D?
I don't think so. While there are lots of traits for
introspection of declarations, there is no way to introspect
lines of code. The whole function
would need to be wrapped into a mixin
Hello.
Is there a current "Best Practices" for logging in D?
For the actual logging, I know of `std.experimental.logger`.
However, the `experimental` has kept me away from it.
Is it good, or are there any better alternatives?
On Wednesday, 24 April 2019 at 18:56:50 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
For anyone else who comes along looking for the same answer,
here's what I did:
I'm trying to do it with multi-selection. It works now but I
wonder if it's right to just create a dummy TreeModelIF to call
getSelectedRows()? S
I've scoured the docs, the wrapper code, the Internet, but can't
come up with an explanation...
When running this example of a VolumeButton, no matter what the
initial value of the slider, the icon showing is
audio-volume-muted.
I wrote up a second test using the parent, a ScaleButton, passi
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 11:36:26 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
When running this example of a VolumeButton, ...
When using `setValue(initialValue)` after `setAdjustment()` the
scale seems have the correct value. If in addition the Adjustment
is created with an initial value different from the
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 12:40:00 UTC, number wrote:
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 11:36:26 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
When running this example of a VolumeButton, ...
When using `setValue(initialValue)` after `setAdjustment()` the
scale seems have the correct value. If in addition the
Adj
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 11:29:04 UTC, number wrote:
I'm trying to do it with multi-selection. It works now but I
wonder if it's right to just create a dummy TreeModelIF to call
getSelectedRows()? Same question for creating a TreeIter to
call getIter()?
Whatever works, I guess. Just loo
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 15:16:03 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 11:29:04 UTC, number wrote:
I'm trying to do it with multi-selection. It works now but I
wonder if it's right to just create a dummy TreeModelIF to
call getSelectedRows()? Same question for creating a
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 10:33:00 UTC, Vladimirs Nordholm
wrote:
Hello.
Is there a current "Best Practices" for logging in D?
For the actual logging, I know of `std.experimental.logger`.
However, the `experimental` has kept me away from it.
Is it good, or are there any better alternativ
On 25-04-2019 15:19, Ron Tarrant wrote:
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 12:40:00 UTC, number wrote:
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 11:36:26 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
When running this example of a VolumeButton, ...
When using `setValue(initialValue)` after `setAdjustment()` the scale
seems have t
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 17:57:25 UTC, Mike Wey wrote:
On 25-04-2019 15:19, Ron Tarrant wrote:
This looks like an issue with GTK, the icon is not updated when
changing the Adjustment, only when the value changes.
So, it should be reported directly to the GTK people rather
than... well.
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
char[] mychars;
mychars ~= 'a';
long index = 0L;
writeln(mychars[index]);
}
Why would the code above compile perfectly on Linux (Ubuntu
16.04), however it would produce the following error on Windows
10:
source\app.d(8,21): Error: cannot implic
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 20:18:28 UTC, Zans wrote:
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
char[] mychars;
mychars ~= 'a';
long index = 0L;
writeln(mychars[index]);
}
Why would the code above compile perfectly on Linux (Ubuntu
16.04), however it would produce the following error o
On Thursday, 25 April 2019 at 20:18:28 UTC, Zans wrote:
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
char[] mychars;
mychars ~= 'a';
long index = 0L;
writeln(mychars[index]);
}
Why would the code above compile perfectly on Linux (Ubuntu
16.04), however it would produce the following error o
On Wednesday, 24 April 2019 at 16:20:17 UTC, Nicholas Wilson
wrote:
How do you pass a delegate to a c++ function to be called by it?
The function to pass the delegate to is:
extern (C++) int
fakeEntrypoint(
extern(C++) void function(void* /*delegate's context*/)
func,
void* /*delegate
I tried to build a DLL in a Windows 64bit environment.
It works well if the compiler is DMD, but in the case of LDC, the
build fails with a large number of undefined symbol errors.
Is this a DUB or LDC bug?
Or do I have to specify some additional arguments to the command?
On Sunday, 18 March 2018 at 16:14:06 UTC, Michael wrote:
On Sunday, 18 March 2018 at 15:42:18 UTC, Andrey Kabylin wrote:
On Sunday, 18 March 2018 at 15:32:47 UTC, Michael wrote:
On Sunday, 18 March 2018 at 14:58:52 UTC, Andrey Kabylin
wrote:
In DList we have method remove, but I can't understan
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