On 12/12/22 8:45 PM, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
for(auto r = aa.byKey, auto k = r.front; !r.empty; r.popFront)
err... forgot the continual front assignment
I think it's more like:
for(auto r = aa.byKey; !r.empty; r.popFront) {
auto k = r.front;
// foreach body
}
-Steve
On 12/12/22 7:54 PM, lili wrote:
is foreach Syntactic sugar?, like for-range in C++, if it is, compiler
how implement
Yes it is syntax sugar. The lowering depends on what the item you're
iterating is.
For an associative array `byKey`, it is converting the AA into a range
of keys, and for
is foreach Syntactic sugar?, like for-range in C++, if it is,
compiler how implement
On Monday, 12 December 2022 at 04:49:09 UTC, Siarhei Siamashka
wrote:
On Sunday, 11 December 2022 at 06:50:44 UTC, Joel wrote:
I've been trying to fill in areas with a colour but can't work
it out. I want something like the effect where it fills with
diamonds. Not all at once but building up in
On Sunday, 11 December 2022 at 17:45:20 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
There is: https://dlang.org/phobos/std_container_dlist.html
Why is it called ``DList`` and not just ``List``, i have no clue
The D is to indicate that it is a doubly-linked list. It
maintains a forward and backward pointer chain to s
On 12/12/22 12:23 PM, lili wrote:
```
int[string] aa = ["ok":1, "aaa":2, "ccc":3, "ddd":4];
foreach (k ; aa.byKey)
{
if (k == "aaa") {
aa.remove(k);
aa["ww"] = 33;
}
if (k == "ww") {
aa.remove(k);
aa["vv"] = 33;
}
```
int[string] aa = ["ok":1, "aaa":2, "ccc":3, "ddd":4];
foreach (k ; aa.byKey)
{
if (k == "aaa") {
aa.remove(k);
aa["ww"] = 33;
}
if (k == "ww") {
aa.remove(k);
aa["vv
On Monday, 12 December 2022 at 08:54:33 UTC, realhet wrote:
1. checking inside (on the first hierarchy level inside {})
, => must be a struct initializer
; => must be a lambda
no , and no ; => check it from the outside
Some statements don't end in a semicolon, so you would also ne
On 12/12/22 3:54 AM, realhet wrote:
Hi,
I'm writing a DLang parser and got confused of this.
What is a good way to distinguish lambda functions and structure
initialization blocks.
Both of them are {} blocks.
I'm thinking of something like this:
1. checking inside (on the first hierarchy le
On Monday, 12 December 2022 at 11:17:47 UTC, jni wrote:
It's good. But you did the java bindings by hand or is there a
generator in arsd.jni for that too?
It does it automatically. You compile jni.d with
`-version=WithClassLoadSupport` and then write a main function
that calls `jarToD("path/t
On Monday, 12 December 2022 at 01:28:42 UTC, Adam D Ruppe wrote:
On Monday, 12 December 2022 at 01:19:23 UTC, jni wrote:
The boilerplate is easy but Then the other part is a
problem for me is the necessary other Java classes. They are
not part of the NDK so the only way to load the jar is t
Hi,
I'm writing a DLang parser and got confused of this.
What is a good way to distinguish lambda functions and structure
initialization blocks.
Both of them are {} blocks.
I'm thinking of something like this:
1. checking inside (on the first hierarchy level inside {})
, => must be a st
On Sunday, 11 December 2022 at 17:45:20 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
Why is it called ``DList`` and not just ``List``, i have no clue
Probably because it is a *D*ouble-linked List :-)
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