On Thursday, 30 January 2020 at 13:23:17 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
On Thursday, 30 January 2020 at 06:12:32 UTC, Michael wrote:
I did exactly just what you proposed.
yeah i often just leave my random filenames in there, in this
case rl was one of them. (if you don't put `.d` at the end of a
filename, dmd will add it automatically). Generally a "module X
is in file X which cannot be read" error means you should:
1) double-check any filenames on the command line. Make sure no
typos etc and the files all exist. With my samples that
frequently means changing the filename from whatever nonsense I
left in my lazy copy/paste :P
2) If all the files are in place, this error can also be caused
by a mismatch between the `module` name in an imported file and
the `import` statement that is trying to use it. Those should
always match.
I'm getting a bit more familiar with D. Really nice. Just wrote a
program consisting of several files. Importing works fine now and
also GNU readline.
Thanks for your help