On Sunday, 21 April 2024 at 08:44:38 UTC, alex wrote:
Hi guys. Trying to play with vibe-d and want to create separate
web app, and cli app which can add admin users. When I just
keep both files app.d and cli.d in source folder, I get an
error that I can't have more then 1 main function.
You
On Saturday, 30 March 2024 at 05:01:32 UTC, harakim wrote:
@D Language Foundation - This is a HUGE selling point. I had to
use cups the other day and I just copied some code from a d
file and linked the library. It was so easy I was suspicious
but it worked. Using C from D is pretty much as
On Friday, 23 February 2024 at 23:30:26 UTC, kdevel wrote:
The DIP 1036e is not listed in
https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/tree/master/DIPs
is this intentional?
The DIP process has been closed for a while now. Atila did write
a proposal for Adam's implementation, and I'll add it to the repo
On Sunday, 30 July 2023 at 05:28:32 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
I should have explained exactly what i am doing..
Looks like it doesn't work when i compile in 2 step
- compile with: ``dmd -c of=bin/game.o``
- link with: ``dmd bin/game.o``
When doing it this way, then it doesn't work
However, when com
On Friday, 28 July 2023 at 21:07:47 UTC, bachmeier wrote:
On Friday, 28 July 2023 at 17:07:37 UTC, IchorDev wrote:
No shit, it felt like an eternity. But it's still not in the
spec...?
I'd expect it to appear in the spec after there's a real
release. This is the first I've heard of it bei
On Friday, 16 June 2023 at 06:38:17 UTC, Murloc wrote:
Thanks! That works well. I thought that `module pack.file1` is
implicitly there by default :')
The compiler will use the file name as a default module name if
you don't provide one, but that's *just* the module name. It
doesn't take in
On Thursday, 8 June 2023 at 07:01:44 UTC, Benny wrote:
I got something! thank you.
now I need to understand how can I get the properties of the
GetInterfaceInfo
```
import core.sys.windows.iphlpapi;
import std.stdio;
import core.stdc.stdlib;
void main()
{
uint* i;
i =
On Thursday, 8 June 2023 at 05:52:43 UTC, Benny wrote:
```
```
app.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol
GetInterfaceInfo referenced in function _Dmain
app.exe : fatal error LNK1120: 1 unresolved externals
Error: linker exited with status 1120
```
That's a linker error telling you
On Monday, 5 June 2023 at 14:29:35 UTC, Richard (Rikki) Andrew
Cattermole wrote:
On 06/06/2023 2:25 AM, Mike Parker wrote:
On Monday, 5 June 2023 at 14:16:39 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
In my book this is broken and needs to be fixed, as a user i
don't care about under the hood things, it's a you prob
On Monday, 5 June 2023 at 14:16:39 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
In my book this is broken and needs to be fixed, as a user i
don't care about under the hood things, it's a you problem,
user should be able to unit test
The docs say it should work:
https://dlang.org/spec/betterc.html#unittests
So eith
On Saturday, 3 June 2023 at 09:04:35 UTC, Dom DiSc wrote:
You can replace your whole makefile by calling the compiler
with -I (not always, but if you don't do funny things in your
makefile).
That would be `-i`.
- This ability of the D compiler was just recently discovered
(after -I was imp
On Thursday, 1 June 2023 at 15:05:40 UTC, Marcone wrote:
I linked msvcr120.lib, but the executable still ask for
msvcr120.dll not found.
msvcr120.lib is a "link library", not a static library. On other
systems, you pass shared libraries directly to the linker and it
will pull the informati
On Monday, 1 May 2023 at 09:17:14 UTC, Eric P626 wrote:
This is a false dilemma: D has full C compatibility.
From what I understand, D can use C, but C cannot use D? It's
like C++: C++ can call C but C cannot call C++.
50% or more of my code will be put in re-usabled libraries. If
I want pe
On Monday, 1 May 2023 at 09:35:59 UTC, Dukc wrote:
hard. Seems the C-linked functions in
[core.runtime](https://dlang.org/phobos/core_runtime.html#.Runtime.initialize) ought to do the trick.
If you're referring to `rt_init` and `rt_term` are the
`extern(C)` functions in `core.runtime`. It's no
On Thursday, 27 April 2023 at 20:32:24 UTC, Jan Allersma wrote:
```
Apparently foo isn't found from the CPP source file. Anyone
some ideas on how to solve this? :)
That's a compilation error, not a linker problem. You need to
tell the compiler about the function with a prototype:
```C++
#i
On Sunday, 16 April 2023 at 07:46:53 UTC, Skippy wrote:
I wish D had value type classes as well.
I like the distinction between class and struct in D. It
encourages you to think harder about how you intend to use your
types. In C++, there may as well only be one or the other; the
distincti
On Sunday, 16 April 2023 at 05:58:39 UTC, Skippy wrote:
These lines aren't necessary:
// ??
int counter;
// ??
static this()
{
counter = test.objCnt;
}
`t1` is default-initialized, so it's null.
test t1, t2 = new test();
Ditto for t3. Classes are reference objects, not value obje
On Saturday, 15 April 2023 at 00:42:17 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
I also suggest you visit the issues page for bindbc-imgui and
file an issue there:
I meant to delete this line. I've filed the issue:
https://github.com/BindBC/bindbc-imgui/issues/1
On Friday, 14 April 2023 at 20:30:56 UTC, el machine code wrote:
so my question why am i'm getting this error and how do i fix
this?
The two listed packages depend on bindbc-sdl, and they do so in a
way that is incompatible with each other.
On your end, you can edit `dub.selections.json` in
On Sunday, 9 April 2023 at 09:54:26 UTC, Ki Rill wrote:
Why can't it find these libraries? I tell where to look for
them:
```D
version(Windows) {
import bindbc.loader;
setCustomLoaderSearchPath("libs"); // tried using absolute
path as well
}
```
That is strange...
I've tried your
On Saturday, 8 April 2023 at 11:31:40 UTC, Ki Rill wrote:
How do I set up a D and SFML project using the `bindbc-sfml`
package?
I tried following the instructions, it builds successfully, but
fails to load the SFML library at runtime.
In particular, `loadSFML, loadSFMLGraphics, loadSFMLXXX`
On Tuesday, 14 March 2023 at 05:47:35 UTC, Jeremy wrote:
Hi, in C and C++ you can use #define to substitute a value in
place of an identifier while preprocessing. If you initialize a
new string and don't change its value after that, will the
compiler substitute the string identifier with its va
On Monday, 13 March 2023 at 13:20:21 UTC, Joe wrote:
Yeah, it seems like it's *only* for libraries (and a few
single-exe utilities). Looking at code.dlang.org, under
"Stand-alone applications/Server software", the top rated item
is "handy-httpd" which according to its dub.json builds a
libra
On Monday, 13 March 2023 at 05:05:27 UTC, Jeremy wrote:
Hello, I am new to this forum and to D.
I am trying to compile a basic D program with libraries
(`requests` which requires `cachetools` and `automem`) without
using dub. I have never used dub before, only a compiler.
The folders contain
On Saturday, 11 March 2023 at 12:04:25 UTC, bomat wrote:
So my question is:
Is Phobos essentially incompatible to `@nogc`?
Or is there a trick for mixing GC code with non-GC code that I
don't know?
I'm assuming the second, for if the first was true I'd say that
D would be pretty much useless
On Monday, 6 March 2023 at 02:09:23 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
dub should build a static library for the project i build, that
includes each library it uses that are referenced as "library"
since the default is "staticLibrary" according to rikki
What you're asking for is a different use case. `st
On Monday, 6 March 2023 at 01:52:06 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
6B71D90\dparse.lib -g
```
Are you saying dub doesn't build a static dcd.lib?
What to do to make it so i get a static dcd.lib file that
contains all the code it needs?
This comfort me in my desire to no longer use dub ever
This is not
On Monday, 20 February 2023 at 06:26:34 UTC, FeepingCreature
wrote:
There have now been three pages produced by three people all
agreeing with each other.
At what point does it start being spam?
Yes, it's all just noise now. Let's end it here. Further posts in
this thread will be deleted
On Sunday, 19 February 2023 at 21:05:33 UTC, WhatMeWorry wrote:
and is abending with an error saying exactly this. How do I
specify the path to this library? Can I use one of the
environment variables in sc.ini, one of the Windows env
variables, or one of the dub options?
Btw, I'm bypassi
On Thursday, 16 February 2023 at 02:26:44 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
Wrong. I'm arguing things:
Geez. "I'm arguing 2 things:"
On Wednesday, 15 February 2023 at 20:10:31 UTC, ProtectAndHide
wrote:
What Mike is arguing, is that I don't need a 'data hiding'
mechanism for a user-defined type, because that is already
provided to me by the 'data hiding' mechanism of the module.
That is his argument.
My argument is tha
On Wednesday, 15 February 2023 at 09:51:41 UTC, zjh wrote:
What if two classes in the module that are several meters apart
make `mistakes` that change the privite variable of `another
class`?
No one can guarantee that after `a few months`, even if you are
the author, you will not make mist
On Wednesday, 15 February 2023 at 08:56:00 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
If private were restricted to the class/struct, it would add
anything more for encapsulation in D.
I meant to say, it "wouldn't add more".
On Wednesday, 15 February 2023 at 07:23:39 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
Why is the unit of encapsulation the module though? Makes no
sense.
What is the purpose of encapsulation? To keep the implementation
details hidden behind the public API, such that changing the
implementation doesn't
On Wednesday, 15 February 2023 at 01:16:00 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
I think what you could say is that D lacks _encapsulation_
which is also an OOP concept. So D is partially OOP but not
fully OOP due to there being no encapsulation in the language.
D does not lack encapsulation, it's
On Monday, 23 January 2023 at 00:36:36 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
I haven't been programming for a long time, but most of the
other languages I used had such a namespace feature. Kotlin has
something called an `object` which is essentially a namespace
and it is great. The benefits of addi
On Monday, 23 January 2023 at 00:11:17 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
Sorry don't like that solution specifically. That's because it
is a procedural implementation, not an OOP-style one. I don't
know how much of the D community writes procedurally but I'm
personally an OOP-type of guy.
A cl
On Friday, 13 January 2023 at 05:17:59 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
(Sorry if this is a duplicate.)
If I have the following code inside of a module:
```D
class Obj {
private {
string name = "Hi";
}
}
class ObjDerived : Obj {
}
```
Is it best practice to define `ObjDerived` in
On Wednesday, 28 December 2022 at 02:31:45 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
In Java and some other languages, during compile time the code
gets executed into Java bytecode. This also happens for C#. I
don't know if there is an equivalent 'intermediate' language
for D that your code gets transl
On Monday, 19 December 2022 at 22:22:11 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
No worries, hopefully a mod will explain why. I don't like when
posts get removed for no reason :|
I received a report of a possible troll in the forums. Looking at
the posts collectively, I agreed, so deleted all of them.
On Thursday, 24 November 2022 at 03:49:16 UTC, []() {}() wrote:
I broke a forum rule by critically analysing your blog?
Wow.
Criticize my blog posts all you want. Just stop please stop
derailing threads. I'm going to delete further off topic posts in
this thread.
On Wednesday, 23 November 2022 at 23:35:59 UTC, thebluepandabear
wrote:
Please stop, we get it... I'm not a moderator so I cannot
enforce rules but there is NO need to continue this debate
here. This software 'religiousness' is too much.
I am a moderator and I can enforce the rules. So yes
On Tuesday, 15 November 2022 at 02:49:55 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
It's not the scope that matters here. It's the stack. Memory
allocated in the inner scope uses the function stack, so it's
all valid until the function exits.
And that was just so, so wrong. Of course destructors get called
whe
On Tuesday, 15 November 2022 at 02:26:41 UTC, Elfstone wrote:
I failed to find any documentation, except dynamic array slices
will be taken care of by GC, but I assume it's not the case
with static arrays.
A slice is a view on the existing memory owned by the original
array. No allocations ar
On Sunday, 13 November 2022 at 09:15:39 UTC, qua wrote:
I agree it was unexpected that it didn't, at least for
newcomers.
Almost everyone is a newcomer when it comes to ImportC.
On Saturday, 12 November 2022 at 10:02:12 UTC, confuzzled wrote:
On Saturday, 12 November 2022 at 08:43:13 UTC, Mike Parker
wrote:
On Saturday, 12 November 2022 at 02:45:52 UTC, confuzzled
wrote:
The linker doesn't care if the libraries are C or D, and the
compiler is only involved in that yo
On Saturday, 12 November 2022 at 02:45:52 UTC, confuzzled wrote:
It seems that every time I resolve one of these undefined
symbols issues, the compiler finds more. So I keep copying lib
files from locations that are a path, to my working directory
and linking them to my script. Is that the n
On Tuesday, 8 November 2022 at 06:21:11 UTC, vushu wrote:
So I do feel, that I am in need for some learning materials or
guidance.
You might find Lucian Danescu's DConf '22 presentation helpful:
https://youtu.be/JYkb3PjIn4c
On Thursday, 3 November 2022 at 06:02:13 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
are in C++. D enforces the distinction that C++
...that C++ programmers often follow by convention.
On Thursday, 3 November 2022 at 05:41:06 UTC, Siarhei Siamashka
wrote:
Thanks for the link and also thanks for confirming that you
have no clue what's going on. I think that what actually
That's not necessary. He does know what's going on and pointed
you to the correct place. The second para
On Thursday, 27 October 2022 at 16:40:20 UTC, DLearner wrote:
I'm not getting on with DUB.
Maybe fewer people use it under Windows, so Windows constructs
don't get exercised so much.
Is there a non-DUB way of arranging that
`import arsd.terminal;`
will use that module as held on GitHub?
(DUB
On Friday, 28 October 2022 at 01:37:50 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
This has nothing to do with dub and is not a D issue
specifically. Enter your error message in Google and you'll get
a long list of results. Maybe one of them can help you.
Or do what kinke suggests :-)
On Thursday, 27 October 2022 at 08:08:38 UTC, Yura wrote:
curl.d:(.text._D3std3net4curl7CurlAPI7loadAPIFZPv+0xd):
warning: Using 'dlopen' in statically linked applications
requires at runtime the shared libraries from the glibc version
used for linking
and many other warnings like this.
W
On Wednesday, 19 October 2022 at 03:10:29 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
It's right there in the summary of the Final Review of the DIP
that I linked above:
https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/accepted/DIP1038.md#final-review
I meant to say the summary of the formal assessment. One of
On Wednesday, 19 October 2022 at 01:34:54 UTC, mw wrote:
On Wednesday, 19 October 2022 at 01:30:23 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
On Wed, Oct 19, 2022 at 01:15:37AM +, Adam D Ruppe via
it only applies to types, not to functions.
Wat... so what's the use of it then? So it's not possible to
mark
On Sunday, 16 October 2022 at 11:09:31 UTC, Decabytes wrote:
I'm confused at what/where exactly D expect files to be for
them to considered "installed".
D doesn't expect them to be anywhere. By default, the compiler
will search relative to the current working directory, on any
paths confi
On Sunday, 16 October 2022 at 11:09:31 UTC, Decabytes wrote:
Building x64\Debug\chip8.exe...
chip8.d(4): Error: unable to read module `raylib`
chip8.d(4):Expected 'raylib.d' or 'raylib\package.d' in
one of the following import paths:
import path[0] = C:\D\dmd2\windows\bin\..\..\src\pho
On Friday, 14 October 2022 at 22:17:52 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
Given that this particular trap crops up regularly, perhaps
some sort of warning ought to be added. Once the @nodiscard DIP
is accepted & implemented this should be easy to do.
Seems like you're behind the times! The DIP was acce
On Friday, 14 October 2022 at 21:51:54 UTC, WhatMeWorry wrote:
I lost about a half an hour troubleshooting some code of mine
which as it turned out to be resolved with just one line.
// paths.remove(i); // compiles fine but does nothing
paths = paths.remove(i); // works - what I erroneou
On Sunday, 2 October 2022 at 11:00:06 UTC, Daniel Donnell, Jr
wrote:
I thought I set everything up correctly, and now:
```
Exception thrown at 0x7FF7D6E2E230 in metamath-d.exe:
0xC096: Privileged instruction.
Unable to open natvis file
'c:\Users\fruit\.vscode\extensions\webfreak.code-d
On Sunday, 2 October 2022 at 11:33:47 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
I only have Visual Studio 2022. Will the installer be updated
to support that or am I missing some components?
![Installer](https://i.ibb.co/sCZRFRf/installer.jpg)
You should be fine. Select the bottom option since you already
hav
On Sunday, 11 September 2022 at 09:15:11 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
Pointers to non-static member functions always produce a
delegate. Otherwise, you wouldn't be able to access the class
instance's members.
Reference:
https://dlang.org/spec/function.html#closures
On Sunday, 11 September 2022 at 09:02:31 UTC, Injeckt wrote:
I have a one class and two modificators, where in "public"
function I'm calling CreateThread with address of the
ClientThread function which stored in same class, but in
"private" modificator.
And i get this error:
Error: cannot pas
On Saturday, 10 September 2022 at 10:39:12 UTC, Injeckt wrote:
To elaborate on why you need the above...
But I get these bugs:
WndProc is a function, and you can't pass a function as a runtime
function parameter, only pointers to functions. The first two
errors tell you exactly what the pro
On Saturday, 10 September 2022 at 10:39:12 UTC, Injeckt wrote:
And after all, I call it:
KK_CreateWindowClass(WndProc);
`KK_CreateWindowClass(&WndProc);`
On Wednesday, 7 September 2022 at 20:23:03 UTC, Injeckt wrote:
Convert it to D:
extern(C) const(char)* inet_ntop(int af, const(void)* src,
char* dst, socklen_t size);
Win32 API functions need to be `extern(Windows)`.
You probably also need:
alias socklen_t = ...;
https://githu
On Tuesday, 6 September 2022 at 04:36:55 UTC, ShadoLight wrote:
True. In that case just distribute the DLL (taken from the DMD
bin folder) alongside the HelloWorld EXE so that both reside in
the same folder on the target computer.
The proper way to do this is to ship the correct version of
On Friday, 19 August 2022 at 04:25:25 UTC, Ruby The Roobster
wrote:
So that's why it compiled. Still, I believe that stuff like
this ought to be detected at compile time, as supposed to in a
unittest or, if someone forgot to write the tests, in
production.
If the template is never instanti
On Monday, 25 July 2022 at 09:04:29 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
I have small C program that uses a pointer to change the start
address of a string, and when I tried to do the same code but
with D, the D code printed the address of the string after I
increased it one step instead of printing the strin
On Friday, 1 July 2022 at 13:44:20 UTC, Chris Katko wrote:
It appears module access to a class is broken until the
constructor finishes.
No, it has nothing to do with the module. It's the reference
itself.
Until the constructor returns, the reference through which you're
constructing the i
On Friday, 1 July 2022 at 13:20:15 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
r.
And that also looks like the source of your original segfault.
You've got a circular reference going on in the constructors.
In other words, you're constructing a global world instance,
which in turn constructs an elf instance, whi
On Friday, 1 July 2022 at 13:01:30 UTC, Chris Katko wrote:
Forgot the last line. That's important because world MUST exist
by time elf is called... because world... created and called
elf.
So it's not a memory issue, but some sort of linkage issue.
world is null because the constructor didn'
On Wednesday, 22 June 2022 at 11:19:59 UTC, Antonio wrote:
I see now: DIP 1033 will solve this (i.e., using named
arguments in struct constructor... similar to how dart/flutter
works)
That would be DIP 1030:
https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/accepted/DIP1030.md
Max Haughton
On Wednesday, 15 June 2022 at 04:26:44 UTC, Salih Dincer wrote:
Hi,
I've been interested in conversion possibilities for a while.
I tried to convert a string containing numbers but with no
success in single digits. The only solution I found is to
subtract 48 from the result:
```d
import s
On Tuesday, 14 June 2022 at 14:32:50 UTC, ryuukk_ wrote:
```
nk.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol test
referenced in function _Dmain
```
Am i missing something important? (that is a dub project,
created with: dub init)
DMD: v2.100.0-dirty
This works from the command line:
On Sunday, 12 June 2022 at 23:29:29 UTC, forkit wrote:
I don't get it.
How does this enable one module to access the private parts of
another module?
It doesn't. But what you were describing in your post is
package-level access. By keeping it the cross-module access in a
subpackage, packa
On Sunday, 12 June 2022 at 05:05:46 UTC, forkit wrote:
Is it possible to create a package.d, consisting of (for
example), two modules, where each module can access private
declarations within each other.
In essence, declaring 'a module level friendship', or a kind of
'extended module' if you
On Saturday, 11 June 2022 at 10:37:30 UTC, Bastiaan Veelo wrote:
So that’s why I used “why” in the title of this thread, which I
haven’t seen an answer to yet. What is the practical case where
that warning would be annoying? When would you actually want
this behaviour?
After actually stopp
On Saturday, 11 June 2022 at 01:14:06 UTC, matheus wrote:
So, in the case of "int[] arr = new int[](5)", an array of
length 5 of type int will be instantiated and its address will
be shared among whoever instantiates "S" and be pointed and
accessed through arr.
In the second case, "int[2] ar
On Friday, 10 June 2022 at 14:56:24 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
Discovered circa 2009:
https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2947
It should be illegal to declare a field this way that has
mutable references without being `shared`. End of story.
-Steve
The docs do say that:
The d
On Friday, 10 June 2022 at 07:46:36 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
I think this is a case where having a warning that's on by
default, and which can be explicitly disabled, is useful. "Blah
blah .init blah blah. See link-to-something-in-docs. Is this
what you intended?"
And it *is* documented:
S
On Friday, 10 June 2022 at 07:35:17 UTC, Bastiaan Veelo wrote:
Is there a use case where this makes sense? I would have much
appreciated the compiler slapping me on the fingers, but it
doesn't. I understand that it is safe and that the compiler can
allow this, but why would anyone want that? D
On Wednesday, 8 June 2022 at 00:43:24 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
Do I remember correctly that there were syntax proposals that
used $ or _?
int[$] arr = [ 1, 2 ];
int[_] arr = [ 1, 2 ];
But I can't find past discussions about that.
https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/other/DIP
On Saturday, 4 June 2022 at 14:13:08 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote:
Do DMD , GDC , LDC have the same or different licenses in use ?
DMD
https://github.com/dlang/dmd/blob/master/LICENSE.txt
LDC
https://github.com/ldc-developers/ldc/blob/master/LICENSE
GDC
https://github.com/D-Programming-GDC/gcc/blo
On Thursday, 2 June 2022 at 08:24:51 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
And so, `&ts[0]` is the same as `&(*ts.ptr + 0)`, or simply
`ts.ptr`.
That should be the same as `&(*(ts.ptr + 0))`!
On Thursday, 2 June 2022 at 08:14:40 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
More specifically, it points to the starting address of the
allocated block of memory.
I posted too soon.
Given an instance `ts` of type `T[]`, array accesses essentially
are this:
```d
ts[0] == *(ts.ptr + 0);
ts[1] == *(ts.ptr +
On Thursday, 2 June 2022 at 05:04:03 UTC, Salih Dincer wrote:
Hi,
Do I misunderstand? A dynamic array is allocated memory
according to the `nextpow2()` algorithm(-1 lapse); strings, on
the other hand, don't behave like this...
```d
string str = "0123456789ABCDEF";
char[] chr = str.dup;
On Monday, 23 May 2022 at 08:34:21 UTC, Chris Katko wrote:
D
I'm curious if you can pass a struct of values (a 'tuple'?)
with the right subfields, as if those fields occupied a
function signature. (As I write this and try to explain it, it
probably sounds impossible.)
Right now you can
On Friday, 20 May 2022 at 14:54:31 UTC, Christopher Katko wrote:
So wait, that means if I have a module with extra stuff like
D
colors.d
auto red =
// grey
and then in my other file
D
auto white = grey(1.0);
It won't use CTFE? Why is there a local module requirement?
I'm
On Friday, 20 May 2022 at 07:05:21 UTC, Tejas wrote:
Maybe gtkd?
https://code.dlang.org/packages/gtk-d
And some corresponding tutorials:
https://gtkdcoding.com/
On Friday, 20 May 2022 at 00:12:44 UTC, Chris Katko wrote:
Yeah that occurred to me as I was falling asleep. Though, do I
have to a specify
```D
static auto myColor = grey(0.5);
```
to ensure it's done at compile time? It's not the end of the
world, but ideally, these are static / hardcoded v
On Tuesday, 17 May 2022 at 05:08:30 UTC, matheus wrote:
In D there would be a better way to do such thing?
Nothing really specific to D, but for one or two properties, you
might just add them as function parameters with default values:
```d
void draw(float scale = 1.0f);
```
If you have
On Sunday, 15 May 2022 at 20:05:05 UTC, Kevin Bailey wrote:
One question is, how should we pass objects - by value or by
reference? In C++, you can do either, of course, but you take
your chances if you pass by value - both in safety AND
PERFORMANCE. The bottom line is that no one passes by
On Sunday, 15 May 2022 at 15:26:40 UTC, Kevin Bailey wrote:
I'm trying to understand why it is this way. I assume that
there's some benefit for designing it this way. I'm hoping that
it's not simply accidental, historical or easier for the
compiler writer.
There's a problem that arises with
On Tuesday, 10 May 2022 at 12:12:13 UTC, Tejas wrote:
Using aliases as parameters doesn't work(and the DIP that
wanted to have this behaviour was de facto rejected)
https://github.com/dlang/DIPs/blob/master/DIPs/other/DIP1023.md
No, it wasn't rejected. The author decided it needed reworkin
On Tuesday, 10 May 2022 at 00:50:09 UTC, Vinod K Chandran wrote:
I want to convert this `pszUserString` to a string. How to do
it. Thanks in advance.
```d
import std.conv : to;
string s = to!string(pszUserString);
```
On Wednesday, 4 May 2022 at 05:37:49 UTC, forkit wrote:
That's not at all what I said. You don't have to care about
*when* memory is deallocated, meaning you don't have to manage
it yourself.
In any case, I disagree that caring about when memory gets
deallocted means you shouldn't be using G
On Wednesday, 4 May 2022 at 04:52:05 UTC, forkit wrote:
It is certainly *not* about you not having to care anymore
(about memory management).
That's not at all what I said. You don't have to care about
*when* memory is deallocated, meaning you don't have to manage it
yourself.
On Tuesday, 3 May 2022 at 14:57:46 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote:
Note, It's not i'm against GC. But my preference is to use
builtin types and libraries if possible,
But at the same time be able to be sure memory is given free
when a variable is going out of scope.
It seems not easy to combine the two
On Tuesday, 3 May 2022 at 12:59:31 UTC, Alain De Vos wrote:
Error: array literal in @nogc function test.myfun may cause a
GC allocation
@nogc void myfun(){
scope int[] i=[1,2,3];
}//myfun
May is a fuzzy word...
It means if the compiler is free to allocate on the stack if
possible. I
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