On Sunday, 15 February 2026 at 21:20:12 UTC, Timon Gehr wrote:
On 2/11/26 13:26, Quirin Schroll wrote:
If a pure factory function returns an non-`shared`-type object, that type should be convertible to `shared` or am I mistaken?
Essentially, this should compile:
```d
int[] make() pure @safe;

void main() @safe
{
     shared xs = make();
}
```
Currently, only the conversion to `const shared` is enabled by uniqueness. I don’t understand that limitation, but I’m not sure I understand `shared` very well.

`const shared` works because it is a supertype of `immutable` and `immutable` works. Even that existing rule is perhaps unsound (depending on what you consider to be the intended semantics of `shared`):

https://forum.dlang.org/post/[email protected]

Basically the issue is that you will have unsynchronized memory writes to some locations that later get transitively typed as `shared`.

That thread is very interesting. Thanks.

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