On Wednesday, 10 May 2017 at 20:25:45 UTC, aberba wrote:
On Thursday, 4 May 2017 at 14:54:58 UTC, 岩倉 澪 wrote:
On Thursday, 4 May 2017 at 12:50:02 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
You can try ldc and llvm intrinsics
http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#alloca-instruction
http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-s
On Thursday, 4 May 2017 at 12:50:02 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
You can try ldc and llvm intrinsics
http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#alloca-instruction
http://llvm.org/docs/LangRef.html#llvm-stacksave-intrinsic
Ah, yep!
pragma(LDC_alloca) void* alloca(size_t);
This appears to work with ldc. It would
On Sunday, 30 April 2017 at 05:07:31 UTC, 岩倉 澪 wrote:
I've been playing around with using D with no runtime on Linux,
but recently I was thinking it would be nice to have an alloca
implementation. I was thinking I could just bump the stack
pointer (with alignment considerations) but from what I
I've been playing around with using D with no runtime on Linux,
but recently I was thinking it would be nice to have an alloca
implementation. I was thinking I could just bump the stack
pointer (with alignment considerations) but from what I
understand compilers sometimes generate code that ref
On Saturday, 30 July 2016 at 05:21:26 UTC, ag0aep6g wrote:
On 07/30/2016 07:00 AM, 岩倉 澪 wrote:
auto mem = malloc(2^^31);
2^^31 is negative. 2^^31-1 is the maximum positive value of an
int, so 2^^31 wraps around to int.min.
Try 2u^^31.
bah, I'm an idiot! CASE CLOSED. Thanks for the
So I ran into a problem earlier - trying to allocate 2GB or more
on Windows would fail even if there was enough room. Mentioned it
in the D irc channel and a few fine folks pointed out that
Windows only allows 2GB for 32-bit applications unless you pass a
special flag which may or may not be a
On Sunday, 6 March 2016 at 11:00:35 UTC, John wrote:
On Sunday, 6 March 2016 at 03:13:23 UTC, 岩倉 澪 wrote:
IShellLinkA* shellLink;
IPersistFile* linkFile;
Any help would be highly appreciated as I'm new to Windows
programming in D and have no idea what I'm doing wrong!
In D, interface
On Sunday, 6 March 2016 at 05:00:55 UTC, BBasile wrote:
If you don't want to mess with the Windows API then you can
dynamically create a script (I do this in CE installer):
This might be an option but I'd prefer to use the Windows API
directly. I don't know vb script and maintaining such a scr
I'm creating a small installation script in D, but I've been
having trouble getting shortcut creation to work! I'm a linux
guy, so I don't know much about Windows programming...
Here are the relevant bits of code I have:
import core.sys.windows.basetyps, core.sys.windows.com,
core.sys.windows