On Thursday, 2 July 2020 at 16:51:52 UTC, kinke wrote:
`= void` for members doesn't work and, I dare say, not work anytime soon if ever.

I've quickly checked; `= void` for members has initialize-with-zeros semantics too, so with LDC, it's equivalent to `= 0` but applicable to user-defined types as well. For DMD, `= void` for non-default-zero-initialized members can be used for the same effect. If all members are effectively zero-initialized, the init symbol isn't emitted, and the compiler initializes the whole struct with zeros. With `= 0`, DMD still emits the init symbol into the object file, but doesn't use it (at least not for stack allocations).

TLDR: Seems like initializing (all non-default-zero-initialized) members with `= void` is the portable solution to elide the init symbols *and* have the compiler initialize the whole struct with zeros, so a manual memset isn't required.

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