On Tuesday, November 26, 2019 4:29:18 AM MST S.G via Digitalmars-d-learn wrote: > On Tuesday, 26 November 2019 at 10:24:00 UTC, Robert M. Münch > > wrote: > > How can I write something like this to check if any of a set of > > specific versions is used? > > > > static assert(!(version(a) | version(b) | version(c)): > > > > The problem is that I can use version(a) like a test, and the > > symbol a is not accessbile from assert (different, > > non-accessible namespace). > > BTW D language designers are against boolean eval of version. > It's not a technical restriction, it's just that they don't want > this to work.
Basically, Walter considers it to be a prime source of bugs in C/C++ code. druntime, Phobos, etc. consistently do stuff like version(Posix) { } else version(Windows) { } else static assert(false, "platform unsupported); when it needs code to differ depending on platform or architecture or whatever. And if that means duplicating some code in each version block, then it means duplicating some code in each version block. static if can be used instead of version blocks to get boolean conditions, and local version identifiers can be defined which combine some set of version identifiers, but such practices are discouraged for D programmers in general, and they're basically forbidden in official source code. The only case I'm aware of where anything like that is used in druntime or Phobos is for darwin stuff, since darwin isn't a predefined identifier. - Jonathan M Davis