On Monday, October 15, 2012 23:35:59 Mehrdad wrote:
> auto sorted(alias F = q{a < b}, SwapStrategy S =
> SwapStrategy.unstable, R)(R range)
> {
> auto arr = range.array();
> arr.sort!(F, S)();
> return arr;
> }What does this gain over sort? If you use sort auto result = sort(range); you get a SortedRange, which functions like find can take advantage of, and it's one line just like your sorted function. If you need a new array for it, then just call array. auto result = sort(array(range)); I don't see what your proposed function buys you. Is it just that you want to operate on the sorted array rather than a SortedRange? In that case, it's just auto arr = array(range); sort(arr); So, sorted would save you all of one line. Such a function seems incredibly lightweight to be adding it to the standard library. - Jonathan M Davis
