On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 23:40:15 UTC, Elie Morisse wrote:
make Calypso an optional shared library
Does it's mean, that Calypso can be work as plugin for Clang?
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 23:40:15 UTC, Elie Morisse wrote:
It's been a while since the last update, so here's a quick one
before making the jump to LDC 0.16.
You should write a blog post explaining what you have done so far
and what remains to be done, then submit it to the usual link
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 23:09:52 UTC, Timon Gehr wrote:
"A call signature for a given member is 'compatible'
* if, for an instance of any one of `SubTypes`, that member
can be called with
* the provided set of arguments _and_ all such calls have a
common return type."
Probably you
On Thursday, 22 October 2015 at 01:19:19 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
On 10/21/2015 07:40 PM, Elie Morisse wrote:
It's been a while since the last update, so here's a quick one
before
making the jump to LDC 0.16.
Great news! What's the story on exceptions? Does Calypso allow
D code to cat
On 10/21/2015 07:40 PM, Elie Morisse wrote:
It's been a while since the last update, so here's a quick one before
making the jump to LDC 0.16.
Great news! What's the story on exceptions? Does Calypso allow D code to
catch exceptions thrown from C++ code? -- Andrei
It's been a while since the last update, so here's a quick one
before making the jump to LDC 0.16.
Kelly added a more complex Qt5 demo, I recently added an Ogre3D
one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eryhDOa9MV0
https://github.com/Syniurge/Calypso/blob/master/tests/calypso/ogre3d/demo.d
dfmt is a formatter for D source code.
Changes from 0.4.0:
* #189: Better formatting for "in" expressions where the right
side of the "in" operator is a function literal.
* #190: Fix a bug where whitespace was removed from some ASM
statements.
* #191: Add "-i" as an alias for the "--inplace"
On 10/18/2015 09:00 PM, rcorre wrote:
SuperStruct is a struct that acts like a class:
---
struct Square {
float size;
float area() { return size * size; }
}
struct Circle {
float r;
float area() { return r * r * PI; }
}
alias Shape = SuperStruct!(Square, Circle);
// look! polymorp
On 10/21/2015 04:38 PM, Laeeth Isharc wrote:
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 19:03:56 UTC, Suliman wrote:
Could anybody reddit this benchmark?
done
https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/3pojrz/the_fastest_json_parser_in_the_world/
Getting good press. Congratulations! -- Andrei
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 22:24:30 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
Am Wed, 21 Oct 2015 04:17:16 +
schrieb Laeeth Isharc :
Very impressive.
Is this not quite interesting ? Such a basic web back end
operation, and yet it's a very different picture from those
who say that one is I/O or netw
On Tuesday, 20 October 2015 at 15:22:41 UTC, Vladimir Panteleev
wrote:
"This video is not available from your location".
I haven't been able to find a mirror that's watchable from here
either.
Same here, though I finally googled out it's key phrase: "It's a
floor wax and a dessert topping!"
Pr
Am Wed, 21 Oct 2015 04:17:16 +
schrieb Laeeth Isharc :
> Very impressive.
>
> Is this not quite interesting ? Such a basic web back end
> operation, and yet it's a very different picture from those who
> say that one is I/O or network bound. I already have JSON files
> of a couple of gig
Am Wed, 21 Oct 2015 17:00:39 +
schrieb Suliman :
> >> > Nice! I see you are using bitmasking trickery in multiple
> >> > places. stdx.data.json is mostly just the plain lexing
> >> > algorithm, with the exception of whitespace skipping. It was
> >> > already very encouraging to get those be
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 19:03:56 UTC, Suliman wrote:
Could anybody reddit this benchmark?
done
https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/3pojrz/the_fastest_json_parser_in_the_world/
Could anybody reddit this benchmark?
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 09:59:09 UTC, Kapps wrote:
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 04:17:19 UTC, Laeeth Isharc
wrote:
Seems like you now get 2.1 gigbytes/sec sequential read from a
cheap consumer SSD today...
Not many consumer drives give more than 500-600 MB/s (SATA3
limit) yet.
> Nice! I see you are using bitmasking trickery in multiple
> places. stdx.data.json is mostly just the plain lexing
> algorithm, with the exception of whitespace skipping. It was
> already very encouraging to get those benchmark numbers that
> way. Good to see that it pays off to go further.
On Tuesday, 20 October 2015 at 12:46:51 UTC, BBasile wrote:
On Monday, 19 October 2015 at 19:56:15 UTC, Jack Stouffer wrote:
On Monday, 19 October 2015 at 15:03:52 UTC, BBasile wrote:
On Saturday, 17 October 2015 at 16:31:38 UTC, DK wrote:
Hi, this link https://github.com/BBasile/Coedit/ doesn'
On Wednesday, October 21, 2015 06:36:31 Suliman via Digitalmars-d-announce
wrote:
> On Monday, 19 October 2015 at 07:48:16 UTC, Sönke Ludwig wrote:
> > Am 16.10.2015 um 18:04 schrieb Marco Leise:
> >> Every value that is read (as opposed to skipped) is validated
> >> according to RFC 7159. That in
http://conferences.oreilly.com/software-architecture-ny/public/cfp/420
Warning though - the date is close to DConf :o). We plan to announce
date and location of DConf 2016 soon.
Andrei
On 2015-10-20 19:08, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
Thanks for the inquiry. We've had our first organizational meeting
during which we decided to proceed with creating an EIN (Employer
Identification Number), which we have since acquired: 47-5352856. Also
we decided to proceed with creating a bank a
On Wednesday, 21 October 2015 at 04:17:19 UTC, Laeeth Isharc
wrote:
Seems like you now get 2.1 gigbytes/sec sequential read from a
cheap consumer SSD today...
Not many consumer drives give more than 500-600 MB/s (SATA3
limit) yet. There are only a couple that I know of that reach
2000 MB/s,
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