On Friday, 14 October 2022 at 18:37:00 UTC, Sergey wrote:
On Friday, 14 October 2022 at 17:41:42 UTC, Yura wrote:
Dear All,

I am very new to D, and it has been a while since I coded in anything than Python. I am using just notepad along with the gdc compiler.

At the moment I need to solve the system of liner equations:

A00*q0 + A01*q1 + A02*q2 ... = -V0
A10*q0 + A11*q1 + A12*q2 ... = -V1
...

Could someone please provide a quick d solution for this, including details on how to install the library & link it to the code? I do not need anything advanced, just the easiest option.

I am sorry for too basic question, just want to check my idea quickly. Thank you!

Firstly I will suggest to install dub - the D package manager. It will be easier to isntall other libraries using it.

Install openblas in your Ubuntu system. After that you can create a new folder and type in terminal
```
dub init
```

The main part will be about "dependencies". Type "lubeck".
After that you could check the example of the simple program here:
https://github.com/kaleidicassociates/lubeck/blob/master/example/source/app.d

It is exactly solving simple system of linear equations.
Link to the package where you can find additional details and documentation: https://code.dlang.org/packages/lubeck

Thank you!

First, I installed dub on Linux. Then I installed both libopenblas-dev and libopenblas-base. After that I tried to initiate a new project via dub init. I tried to use the following dependency: "mir-algorithm". After I got dub.sdl file that contains at the end line:

dependency "mir-algorithm" version="~>3.16.12"

in the top of my el.d file I have:
/+dub.sdl:
dependency "mir-algorithm" version="~>3.16.12"
+/
import std.stdio;
import std.string;
import std.conv;
import std.exception : assertThrown;
import std.math;
import mir.ndslice;

however, when I try to compile it (gdc el.d) it gives me the following error message:

el.d:11:8: error: module ndslice is in file 'mir/ndslice.d' which cannot be read
 import mir.ndslice;
        ^
import path[0] = /usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-linux-gnu/8/include/d

What am I doing wrong? Should I specify the library upon compilation?

I am sorry, I am feeling I am asking too basic question.

Thank you!

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