On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 18:30:41 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 00:57:30 UTC, Peter Hu wrote:
On Thursday, 2 November 2023 at 17:38:33 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Thursday, 2 November 2023 at 13:40:14 UTC, Peter Hu wrote:
[...]
I put it on dub now so you can just
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 18:11:53 UTC, Vahid wrote:
Hi,
I have a date string with the format of "2023-11-04 23:10:20".
I want to convert this string to Date object and also, add ±N
hours to it. For example:
`"2023-11-04 23:10:20" + "+2:00" = "2023-11-05 01:10:20"`
`"2023-11-04
On Friday, November 3, 2023 1:21:42 PM MDT BoQsc via Digitalmars-d-learn
wrote:
> While using `dub`, you might notice that after running `dub` or
> `dub run` command you will end up with notice:
>
> ```
> Starting Performing "debug" build using
> C:\D\dmd2\windows\bin64\dmd.exe for x86_64.
> ```
On Saturday, November 4, 2023 12:11:53 PM MDT Vahid via Digitalmars-d-learn
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a date string with the format of "2023-11-04 23:10:20". I
> want to convert this string to Date object and also, add ±N hours
> to it. For example:
>
> `"2023-11-04 23:10:20" + "+2:00" =
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 00:57:30 UTC, Peter Hu wrote:
On Thursday, 2 November 2023 at 17:38:33 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Thursday, 2 November 2023 at 13:40:14 UTC, Peter Hu wrote:
[...]
I put it on dub now so you can just do "dub add dfl".
In Entice designer you can then change your
Hi,
I have a date string with the format of "2023-11-04 23:10:20". I
want to convert this string to Date object and also, add ±N hours
to it. For example:
`"2023-11-04 23:10:20" + "+2:00" = "2023-11-05 01:10:20"`
`"2023-11-04 23:10:20" + "-2:30" = "2023-11-05 20:40:20"`
How can I do this?
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 14:33:56 UTC, Basile B. wrote:
[...]
Now there is still the question whether the `extern(C)` code
will work as expected or not.
So with few patches could we make it work? DMD can write the C++
function prototype (as it does it with `extern (C)`) and then
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 14:21:49 UTC, Paul Backus wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 03:00:49 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
[...]
`extern(C++)` functions use C++ name mangling, which includes
the types of the parameters in the mangled name. However, since
C++ does not have a built-in slice
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 14:33:56 UTC, Basile B. wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 13:51:20 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
[...]
The type simply cannot be mangled using the C++ mangler as it
does not exist over there. You might have the impression that
this should be allowed, e.g as an
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 13:51:20 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 13:45:56 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
[...]
There is a syntax disagreement here that's why the D compiler
is instantly stopping you from doing any symbol generated
interaction with string in C++
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 14:21:49 UTC, Paul Backus wrote:
[...]
`extern(C++)` functions use C++ name mangling, which includes
the types of the parameters in the mangled name. However, since
C++ does not have a built-in slice type like D's `T[]`, there
is no valid C++ mangling for a D
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 13:51:20 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 13:45:56 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
[...]
There is a syntax disagreement here that's why the D compiler
is instantly stopping you from doing any symbol generated
interaction with string in C++
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 03:00:49 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
I was wondering why C++ linkage forbids strings as arguments
while we can with the C one.
With C linkage, it's translated to a template that's defined in
the automatically generated header, but it just doesn't compile
in C++.
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 15:11:31 UTC, Bogdan wrote:
Can anyone help me to understand what I am missing?
Your loop is likely dominated by sin() calls, And the rest of the
loop isn't complicated enough to outperform the compiler.
What you could do is use the intrinsics to implement a
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 13:45:56 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
[...]
There is a syntax disagreement here that's why the D compiler
is instantly stopping you from doing any symbol generated
interaction with string in C++ interop. C++ doesn't know
'string' and C++ mangles with
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:34:28 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:01:11 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
[...]
So C-strings are just an array of characters that are governed
by simple functions and D strings also defined the same. So
you could see that D strings
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:21:45 UTC, Johan wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:01:11 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 11:18:02 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
```d
extern (C) void hello(string arg) {
import std.stdio;
writeln(arg);
}
```
Compiles
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:01:11 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
[...]
So C-strings are just an array of characters that are governed
by simple functions and D strings also defined the same. So you
could see that D strings are possibly built on the architecture
of C strings. In
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:01:11 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 11:18:02 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
```d
extern (C) void hello(string arg) {
import std.stdio;
writeln(arg);
}
```
Compiles fine with dmd, ldc2 and gdc.
```d
extern (C++) void
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:07:12 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
[...]
We can just assume what you're doing on the C++-side. Are you
using std::string?
You could try as a pointer + length and it might work, but
without seeing your complete code it's quite hard to know what
you want to do.
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:21:45 UTC, Johan wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 12:01:11 UTC, Emmanuel Danso
Nyarko wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 11:18:02 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
```d
extern (C) void hello(string arg) {
import std.stdio;
writeln(arg);
}
```
Compiles
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 11:18:02 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 10:08:20 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 03:00:49 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
I was wondering why C++ linkage forbids strings as arguments
while we can with the C one.
With C linkage,
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 11:18:02 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 10:08:20 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 03:00:49 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
I was wondering why C++ linkage forbids strings as arguments
while we can with the C one.
With C linkage,
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 21:57:57 UTC, Andrey Zherikov wrote:
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 19:21:42 UTC, BoQsc wrote:
However I would want to try to enforce this behaviour from the
`dub.json` or `dub.sdl` file.
IMHO this is not something that should be enforced from package
build
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 10:08:20 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 03:00:49 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
I was wondering why C++ linkage forbids strings as arguments
while we can with the C one.
With C linkage, it's translated to a template that's defined
in the
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 15:32:08 UTC, Sergey wrote:
On Friday, 3 November 2023 at 15:11:31 UTC, Bogdan wrote:
Hi everyone,
I was playing around with the intel-intrinsics library, trying
to improve the speed of a simple area function. I could not
see any performance improvements from
On Saturday, 4 November 2023 at 03:00:49 UTC, Dadoum wrote:
I was wondering why C++ linkage forbids strings as arguments
while we can with the C one.
With C linkage, it's translated to a template that's defined in
the automatically generated header, but it just doesn't compile
in C++.
Can
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