On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 18:30:53 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 18:09:43 UTC, unDEFER wrote:
I know, but why it works in Linux by Linux documentation?
Coincidence. That detail is undefined in the D documentation
which means the implementation is free to do
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 18:09:43 UTC, unDEFER wrote:
I know, but why it works in Linux by Linux documentation?
Coincidence. That detail is undefined in the D documentation
which means the implementation is free to do whatever is easier
for it in a platform-specific manner.
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 14:10:15 UTC, ag0aep6g wrote:
On 12/10/2016 04:39 AM, unDEFER wrote:
man remove:
remove - remove a file or directory
That's documentation for C, not for D.
I know, but why it works in Linux by Linux documentation?
On 12/10/2016 04:39 AM, unDEFER wrote:
man remove:
remove - remove a file or directory
That's documentation for C, not for D.
The function which removes only files named unlink.
The D must guarantee the same behaviour of remove on all OSes.
D has no obligation to follow C in function nami
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 03:36:11 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 03:29:18 UTC, unDEFER wrote:
But it works under Linux
That's just because the underlying C function handles the case.
But the D function makes no promises about that:
std.file.remove's docume
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 01:30:52 UTC, Jonathan M Davis
wrote:
On Saturday, December 10, 2016 01:19:45 unDEFER via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
Well, much as I'd love to rag on Windows for doing dumb and
annoying stuff with file locks (which they do do), in this
case, your code wouldn't
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 03:29:18 UTC, unDEFER wrote:
But it works under Linux
That's just because the underlying C function handles the case.
But the D function makes no promises about that:
std.file.remove's documentation says "removes the file", leaving
what it does to directories
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 01:28:13 UTC, SonicFreak94 wrote:
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 01:19:45 UTC, unDEFER wrote:
remove("D:\\TEST");
Try rmdir instead.
But it works under Linux
On Saturday, December 10, 2016 01:19:45 unDEFER via Digitalmars-d-learn
wrote:
> Hello!
>
> $ cat try.d
> import std.file;
>
> void main ()
> {
> mkdir("D:\\TEST");
> remove("D:\\TEST");
> }
>
> $ ./try.exe
>
> std.file.FileException@std\file.d(731): D:\TEST: Access Denied.
> ---
On Saturday, 10 December 2016 at 01:19:45 UTC, unDEFER wrote:
remove("D:\\TEST");
Try rmdir instead.
Hello!
$ cat try.d
import std.file;
void main ()
{
mkdir("D:\\TEST");
remove("D:\\TEST");
}
$ ./try.exe
std.file.FileException@std\file.d(731): D:\TEST: Access Denied.
What I don't know about removing directories in Windows?
Why I can't remove directory
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