On Friday, 12 July 2019 at 22:46:11 UTC, Anonymouse wrote:
I'm suddenly getting segfaults when running tests on Windows.
It works fine on Linux. I reduced it to a few lines (plus a
dependency) with dustmite, but they don't really make sense[1].
Nevertheless they do trigger the segfault.
Can s
On Tuesday, 9 July 2019 at 19:04:53 UTC, Max Haughton wrote:
Is this a 64 or 32 bit compiler? Also could you post the source
code if possible?
You could try "--DRT-gcopt=profile:1" druntime flag to see if
the compiler is running out of memory for real
Thanks for help. I solved my issue by re
dmd v2.082 cannot reproduce
Needs to be tested on something newer perhaps?
On Friday, 12 July 2019 at 22:46:11 UTC, Anonymouse wrote:
I'm suddenly getting segfaults when running tests on Windows.
It works fine on Linux. I reduced it to a few lines (plus a
dependency) with dustmite, but they don't really make sense[1].
Nevertheless they do trigger the segfault.
Can s
I'm suddenly getting segfaults when running tests on Windows. It
works fine on Linux. I reduced it to a few lines (plus a
dependency) with dustmite, but they don't really make sense[1].
Nevertheless they do trigger the segfault.
Can someone with Windows 10 and dmd 2.087.0 try the following and
On Friday, 12 July 2019 at 11:29:39 UTC, BoQsc wrote:
Gnome project should just rewrite everything in D language,
especially the Gnome Shell. At least that would be a right
direction.
LOL! It would likely take a planet-wide referendum, but I imagine
you'll get strong support on this forum. :
On Friday, 12 July 2019 at 11:13:31 UTC, Ron Tarrant wrote:
Today's post deals with integers in a ComboBox. It's not
exactly tricky, but a little clarification never hurts, right?
Here's where you'll find it:
https://gtkdcoding.com/2019/07/12/0052-mvc-v-int-combobox.html
Gnome project should
Today's post deals with integers in a ComboBox. It's not exactly
tricky, but a little clarification never hurts, right?
Here's where you'll find it:
https://gtkdcoding.com/2019/07/12/0052-mvc-v-int-combobox.html
Thank you all for your responses. I understand that the compiler
can't ensure @safe and @trusted is needed.. I'm not familiar
though with all aspects of D and thought I might have missed
something.
On Friday, 12 July 2019 at 01:24:06 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
BTW, if you're implementing mem
On Thursday, 11 July 2019 at 10:41:38 UTC, Alex wrote:
On Thursday, 11 July 2019 at 09:43:55 UTC, BoQsc wrote:
Here I have a file named: module.d
[...]
There is no main() function since, I want to import this
module, into another .d file.
( If I try to import and module.d does have main()
On Thursday, 11 July 2019 at 19:35:50 UTC, Stefanos Baziotis
wrote:
On Thursday, 11 July 2019 at 18:46:57 UTC, Paul Backus wrote:
Casting from one type of pointer to another and slicing a
pointer are both @system, by design.
Yes, I'm aware, there are no pointers in the code. The pointer
was
On Friday, 12 July 2019 at 07:21:58 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Friday, July 12, 2019 12:51:28 AM MDT Giovanni Di Maria via
Digitalmars- d-learn wrote:
[...]
You mean if the time is currently 15:46:52.7205007, you want an
integer value that's 720?
[...]
Perfect Jonathan .
Thank you
On Friday, July 12, 2019 12:51:28 AM MDT Giovanni Di Maria via Digitalmars-
d-learn wrote:
> Hi
> I have read much, before to write here.
> How can i store, to an int variable, the milliseconds of the
> current time?
> It's simple, but i don't find the solution.
> Thank you very much.
>
> Giovanni
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