On Wednesday, 1 January 2014 at 23:00:33 UTC, alex burton wrote:
In D this would be void bar(in Init init) which makes init const

You should just take Init, without the in.

"in" means that you won't modify AND that you won't let any reference to the argument escape the function's scope. The second part isn't enforced by the compiler right now, but this may change at some point.

"in" basically is "look, don't keep", and since ctor arguments are often kept in the class, it isn't ideal there.

But plain non-const, non-in structs should be fine, that works the same way as a regular function argument list.

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