On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 20:55:38 UTC, Daren Scot Wilson
wrote:
I don't see any D std.* libraries that do this. Are there a Dub
packages I should look at?
If you really want to this in D without any external app or OS
API you could just ping all possible hosts, see which respond and
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 19:55:43 UTC, Stanislav Blinov
wrote:
thanks for the explanation. That really helped :-)
writeln( generate!(() => dice(0.6, 1.4)).take(howManyTimes) );
[1, 1, 1, 1, 0]
(or after reading Ali's response - getting rid of rnd, and using
_ )
writeln( howManyTime
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 22:44:31 UTC, forkit wrote:
and here is how to get the ip (depending on the formatting of
your output of course)
// ---
module test;
import std;
void main()
{
auto result = execute(["bash", "-c", "nmap -sn
192.168.11.0/24 | ack -B2 \"Philips\""]);
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 23:15:18 UTC, forkit wrote:
oh.. this is better i think...
ip = str[ ((lastIndexOf(str, "(")) + 1) .. lastIndexOf(str, ")")
];
On 1/22/22 11:32, forkit wrote:
> trying to make sense of the below:
The generate() solution shown by Stanislav Blinov is suitable here.
> auto rnd = Random(unpredictableSeed);
Somebody else mentioned this before but none of the programs we've seen
so far seemed to need a special random n
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 20:55:38 UTC, Daren Scot Wilson
wrote:
is this helpful:
// ---
module test;
import std;
void main()
{
auto result = execute(["bash", "-c", "nmap -sn
192.168.11.0/24 | ack -B2 \"Phillips\""]);
if(canFind(result.to!string, "Host is up"))
writ
I'm writing a command line program to control certain hardware
devices. I can hardcode or have in a config file the IP addresses
for the devices, if I know that info. If I don't? Then I run an
'nmap' command and look for the devices. But why should I, a
human, have to do any work like that? B
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 19:32:07 UTC, forkit wrote:
trying to make sense of the below:
// ---
module test;
import std;
void main()
{
auto rnd = Random(unpredictableSeed);
int howManyTimes = 5;
// ok - using 'e =>' makes sense
writeln(howManyTimes.iota.map!(e => rnd.d
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 19:01:09 UTC, Stanislav Blinov
wrote:
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 18:00:58 UTC, vit wrote:
[...]
Take by value and make a copy without forwarding:
```d
import std.typecons : Tuple;
import std.meta : allSatisfy;
[...]
Thanks, second options is what I nee
trying to make sense of the below:
// ---
module test;
import std;
void main()
{
auto rnd = Random(unpredictableSeed);
int howManyTimes = 5;
// ok - using 'e =>' makes sense
writeln(howManyTimes.iota.map!(e => rnd.dice(0.6,
1.4)).format!"%(%s,%)");
// ok - though using
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 18:00:58 UTC, vit wrote:
I want implement something like this:
Scratch the previous reply, 'twas a brain fart... Simply take by
value, no need for extra copies at all in that case. Arguments
themselves will become those copies as needed.
```d
import std.meta
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 19:06:38 UTC, Adam D Ruppe wrote:
No. Anything allocated with `new` is not thread local... and
even if it was, you can send the pointer to other threads
anyway.
The only things in thread local storage are the direct values
in the non-shared global variables.
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 18:55:30 UTC, Jaime wrote:
A) Do I need to worry about data being / not being in
thread-local storage?
No. Anything allocated with `new` is not thread local... and even
if it was, you can send the pointer to other threads anyway.
The only things in thread loca
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 18:00:58 UTC, vit wrote:
I want implement something like this:
...
Take by value and make a copy without forwarding:
```d
import std.typecons : Tuple;
import std.meta : allSatisfy;
enum bool isRcPtr(T) = is(T == RcPtr!U, U);
//@safe access to data of multiple
Howdy.
How do I make sure data isn't allocated thread-local, if I also
want to immediately use it in a thread-local way, because, for
instance, I happen to already possess its intended mutex, which
was allocated before it?
Is this sufficient? Also, is it even something to worry about?
```d
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 17:23:12 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 1/22/22 07:17, vit wrote:
> Why local variable of type tuple call destructors immediately
after
> initialization?
I don't even understand where the local variable comes from. If
you want a pair of Foo objects, I would use std.
On 1/22/22 07:17, vit wrote:
> Why local variable of type tuple call destructors immediately after
> initialization?
I don't even understand where the local variable comes from. If you want
a pair of Foo objects, I would use std.typeconst.Tuple.
Otherwise I would use AliasSeq as I understand
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 14:23:32 UTC, Adam Ruppe wrote:
You can't forward to a local variable. Local variables will be
a copy of the tuple. forward only actually works if sent
*directly* to another function call.
There's a bunch of things in D that only work in function
parameter list
You can't forward to a local variable. Local variables will be a
copy of the tuple. forward only actually works if sent *directly*
to another function call.
There's a bunch of things in D that only work in function
parameter lists and not local variables. This is one of them.
Hello,
Why is tuple variable `params` immediately destructed after its
construction?
Why is `check(-2)` after `dtor(2)`?
Code:
```d
import std.stdio : writeln;
import core.lifetime : forward, move;
struct Foo{
int i;
this(int i){
this.i = i;
writeln("ctor(", i, ")
Hello,
I'm just trying to see if it's maybe possible to find some
teammates here for
https://codingcompetitions.withgoogle.com/hashcode ?
That said, I have never participated in HashCode before and I'm
not exactly committed yet. So I may abandon this idea if it
doesn't work out and/or nobod
On Saturday, 22 January 2022 at 01:33:16 UTC, Steven
Schveighoffer wrote:
That second `valuesPerRecord` is not used in the lambda, and
also it's not referring to the original element, it's the name
of a parameter in the lambda.
Are you sure this is doing what you want?
-Steve
It just wor
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