Hi!

With "alias this" accepting runtime variables I'm struggling to understand the difference between a generic function with an "alias this" parameter and another one with a "runtime" parameter of template type.

Example:

// ---- example code ----
import std.stdio: writeln;

void writevalue1(alias param)() { writeln(param); }

void writevalue2(T)(T param) { writeln(param); }

void main() {
  import std.random: uniform;
  auto someNum = uniform(0, 1000); // runtime value
  writevalue1(someNum);
  someNum = uniform(0, 1000);
  writevalue2(someNum);
}
// ---- example end -----

Since both versions work with runtime values, what's are the differences? When I should prefer one version over the other?

If objdump is not lying to me, both calls jump to the same assembly and the only diffence is that the call to writevalue1 does a "mov -0x8(%rdi),%edi" just before the callq instruction.

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