On 01/23/2012 12:51 AM, Caligo wrote:
struct A(uint samples){

   float[samples] _data = void;

   this(float val = 0.0f){ fill(_data[], val); }
}


   auto a = A!8();

a._data is filled with garbage instead of zeros because the
no-argument constructor is called instead of the one that I've
defined.

structs are always default-constructible, and, as a tie-breaker, a function definition that has the exact number of arguments is considered a better match one that has to supply default-arguments to match. You could use a static opCall to make auto a = A!8() work.

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