On Thursday, 4 February 2021 at 20:40:43 UTC, tsbockman wrote:
TLDR; Either make `c` mutable, or override/overload the `C`
associative array support methods `toHash` and `opEquals` to
support `const(C)` objects.
This solved my issue. I finally understood why this was happening
after digging
This code:
void main()
{
import std.typecons : rebindable, tuple;
const c = new C();
auto t = tuple(c.rebindable);
}
class C
{
}
When compiled with DMD 2.095.0 gives a warning:
Warning: struct Rebindable has method toHash, however it cannot
be called with const(Rebindable!(const(C
On Monday, 25 January 2021 at 19:18:47 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 06:45:43PM +, Saurabh Das via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
On Monday, 25 January 2021 at 18:19:24 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
[...]
> It's probably a bug. File a bug on bugzilla:
> https://issue
On Monday, 25 January 2021 at 18:19:24 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
On Mon, Jan 25, 2021 at 06:07:46PM +, Saurabh Das via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
[...]
[...]
[...]
It's probably a bug. File a bug on bugzilla:
https://issues.dlang.org
[...]
[...]
DMD's backend is kno
I'm seeing what appears to be a bug with the -O flag in dmd. Here
is a reduced test case:
struct SomeStruct
{
long value;
}
bool isNumberOne(int i)
{
SomeStruct l;
if(i == 1)
l = SomeStruct(10);
return (l == SomeStruct(10));
}
void main()
{
if (!is
On Saturday, 26 December 2020 at 19:36:24 UTC, ag0aep6g wrote:
On 26.12.20 13:59, ag0aep6g wrote:
Looks like a pretty nasty bug somewhere in
std.experimental.allocator or (less likely) the GC. Further
reduced code:
[...]
Apparently, something calls deallocateAll on a Mallocator
On Thursday, 24 December 2020 at 23:58:45 UTC, Elronnd wrote:
On Thursday, 24 December 2020 at 23:46:58 UTC, Elronnd wrote:
reduced version:
Further reduction: Alloc1 can just be ‘AllocatorList!(n =>
Region!Mallocator(MB))’.
Thank you for the reduced test case.
A small change to the test c
This causes a segfault when run with rdmd -gx:
void main()
{
import std.experimental.allocator : allocatorObject,
expandArray;
import
std.experimental.allocator.building_blocks.allocator_list :
AllocatorList;
import std.experimental.allocator.building_blocks.region :
Region;
i
On Tuesday, 3 March 2020 at 11:35:35 UTC, MoonlightSentinel wrote:
On Tuesday, 3 March 2020 at 11:04:53 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
PS: Any chance this will make it into DMD 2.091.0?
Yes, this fix will be in the upcoming release.
Excellent.
Thank you so much! :)
Saurabh
On Tuesday, 3 March 2020 at 10:57:36 UTC, MoonlightSentinel wrote:
On Tuesday, 3 March 2020 at 09:12:40 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
Is this supposed to not work anymore? Or is this a bug?
That is a bug, see
https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=20629
Oh wow you fixed it already! Amazing!
Th
Hi,
Consider this code:
```
import core.atomic;
struct MyStruct
{
uint a, b;
}
static assert(MyStruct.sizeof == ulong.sizeof);
void main()
{
shared MyStruct ms1;
MyStruct ms2 = atomicLoad(ms1); // This is fine
MyStruct ms3;
cas(&ms1, ms2, ms3);// This
On Sunday, 2 February 2020 at 06:03:01 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
On Sun, Feb 02, 2020 at 03:16:46AM +, Saurabh Das via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
[...]
[...]
> [...]
[...]
[...]
[...]
It's very simple. Let's say you have your code in some string
called 'code'.
On Saturday, 1 February 2020 at 20:37:03 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
On Sat, Feb 01, 2020 at 08:01:34PM +, Andre Pany via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote: [...]
Another approach:
- include the dmd compiler package with your application
- within your app call the compiler executable and compile the
sou
On Saturday, 1 February 2020 at 15:16:41 UTC, Steven
Schveighoffer wrote:
On 2/1/20 8:39 AM, Saurabh Das wrote:
I faced this issue while working with custom formatting for a
struct. I have reduced the error down to this test program:
import std.format, std.stdio, std.array;
struct Test1
{
On Saturday, 1 February 2020 at 13:39:34 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
I faced this issue while working with custom formatting for a
struct. I have reduced the error down to this test program:
[...]
PS: Currently using DMD64 D Compiler v2.090.0
I faced this issue while working with custom formatting for a
struct. I have reduced the error down to this test program:
import std.format, std.stdio, std.array;
struct Test1
{
void toString(W, C)(ref W w, scope const ref FormatSpec!C fmt)
{
pragma(msg, "Test1 function compiled
On Friday, 31 January 2020 at 14:25:30 UTC, Basile B. wrote:
On Friday, 31 January 2020 at 11:19:37 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
Fundamentally DMD as a library is a front-end. Jitting is to
the backend side.
You'll be able to lex and parse the source to get an AST, to
perform the semantic p
I see that DUB has DMD as a library package, but I was not able
to understand how to use it.
Is it possible to use DMD as a library within a D program to
compile a string to machine code and run the compiled code at
runtime?
Thanks,
Saurabh
The cent and ucent types are reserved for the future. Is there
any knowledge/timeline on when they might be implemented?
Currently, is there a useable 128bit integer type in DMD/LDC/GDC?
Or perhaps a library that implements 128bit integers? I've come
across gfm:integers
(https://github.com/d-
Thank you for explaining all this.
It is frustrating because the behaviour is very counterintuitive.
I will use a workaround for now.
Saurabh
Is this a bug with writeln?
void main()
{
import std.stdio, std.range, std.algorithm;
auto a1 = sort([1,3,5,4,2]);
auto a2 = sort([9,8,9]);
auto a3 = sort([5,4,5,4]);
pragma(msg, typeof(a1));
pragma(msg, typeof(a2));
pragma(msg, typeof(a3));
auto b = [a1, a2, a3
I've been using ndslice for some timeseries work and it's
incredibly good.
One question which I couldn't find an answer to: Can ndslice
behave as a scalar (ie: 0-dimensional slice)?
It would be convenient if that is possible since then I won't
have to write different functions for scalars an
On Saturday, 14 October 2017 at 09:03:05 UTC, Joakim wrote:
On Saturday, 14 October 2017 at 04:36:25 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
I can reproduce on linux/x64, looks like a memory leak, as dmd
balloons out to eat up all available memory until it's killed.
I see it with this minimal command
On Wednesday, 11 October 2017 at 08:11:37 UTC, Jonathan M Davis
wrote:
On Wednesday, October 11, 2017 06:25:19 Dhananjay via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
Hello,
I am upgrading to DMD 2.076.1 from DMD 2.069.2 (similar
results on 2.075.1), and seeing a huge increase in unittest
compilation time w
On Monday, 3 July 2017 at 03:57:25 UTC, Basile B wrote:
On Monday, 3 July 2017 at 03:50:14 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
6.251 has no perfect double representation. It's real value is:
6.215099962483343551867E0
Hence when you cast to ulong after the product by 10_000, this
is th
Consider this snippet:
void main()
{
import std.stdio;
auto a = 6.2151;
auto b = a * 1;
auto c = cast(ulong)b;
writeln("a: ", typeof(a).stringof, " ", a);
writeln("b: ", typeof(b).stringof, " ", b);
writeln("c: ", typeof(c).stringof, " ", c);
auto x = 62151.0;
PS: Noticed something off. My python installation is 3.4.3:
Python 3.4.3 (default, Sep 14 2016, 12:36:27)
[GCC 4.8.4] on linux
However when I run:
context.py_stmts("import sys");
context.py_stmts("print(sys.version)");
I get:
3.4.0 (default, Apr 11 2014, 13:08:40)
[GCC 4.8.2]
Also, whe
I've been giving PyD a try. It's really nice and mostly
everything works out of the box.
I'm trying to use TensorFlow in D via Pytho, so I need to call
Python functions in D.
When I try to do:
auto context = new InterpContext();
context.py_stmts("import tensorflow");
I get this erro
On Thursday, 24 November 2016 at 07:57:47 UTC, Jacob Carlborg
wrote:
On 2016-11-24 07:29, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
Yes. You can configure the logging on the HTTPServerSettings
[1] instance. If you look at the documentation, the first four
fields are related to logging. Use "accessLogFile" to
Hi,
Is there an easy way to log all incoming requests and outgoing
responses (and perhaps processing time, wait time, etc) in Vibe.D?
Thanks,
Saurabh
On Friday, 11 November 2016 at 13:30:17 UTC, RazvanN wrote:
I am trying to concatenate 2 ranges of the same type
(SortedRange in my case). I have tried merge, join and chain,
but the problem is that the result is not an object of the type
of the initial ranges. For example:
1. If I use chain(
On Tuesday, 25 October 2016 at 14:31:39 UTC, bachmeier wrote:
On Tuesday, 25 October 2016 at 13:58:33 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
Installation amounts to installing a couple of R packages that
I have on Bitbucket, as described on the project page. I have
basic usage examples there as well
On Tuesday, 25 October 2016 at 13:26:49 UTC, bachmeier wrote:
On Tuesday, 25 October 2016 at 11:17:29 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
Hello,
Are there any good ML libraries for D? In particular, looking
for a neural network library currently. Any leads would be
appreciated.
Thanks,
Saurabh
I have
#x27;ve used FANN (a C library) together with
D and it worked very well.
2016-10-25 13:17 GMT+02:00 Saurabh Das via Digitalmars-d-learn
< digitalmars-d-learn@puremagic.com>:
Hello,
Are there any good ML libraries for D? In particular, looking
for a neural network library cur
Hello,
Are there any good ML libraries for D? In particular, looking for
a neural network library currently. Any leads would be
appreciated.
Thanks,
Saurabh
On Monday, 24 October 2016 at 15:59:05 UTC, Meta wrote:
On Monday, 24 October 2016 at 15:28:50 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
Yes, that's correct. This is the overload of `repeat` in
question:
https://dlang.org/phobos/std_range.html#.repeat.2
Take!(Repeat!T) repeat(T)(T value, size_t n);
R
On Monday, 24 October 2016 at 15:28:50 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
On Monday, 24 October 2016 at 14:25:46 UTC, Dorian Haglund
wrote:
Hey,
The following code crashes with DMD64 D Compiler v2.071.2:
import std.algorithm;
import std.stdio;
import std.range;
int main()
{
repeat(8, 10).chunks(3).wri
On Monday, 24 October 2016 at 14:25:46 UTC, Dorian Haglund wrote:
Hey,
The following code crashes with DMD64 D Compiler v2.071.2:
import std.algorithm;
import std.stdio;
import std.range;
int main()
{
repeat(8, 10).chunks(3).writeln();
return 0;
}
Error message:
pure nothrow @nogc @safe
On Thursday, 22 September 2016 at 10:44:29 UTC, llaine wrote:
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 21:32:02 UTC, Rene
Zwanenburg wrote:
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 20:22:42 UTC, llaine wrote:
Yes, but it may take some time. For large projects, running it
on a server is advisable. 3K LOC s
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 14:15:30 UTC, llaine wrote:
Using dmd every day and since one day I'm getting this error
when I'm compiling using the -b release flag (dub build -b
release).
I'm compiling a vibe.d application that has roughly 3k LoC.
Removing the -b flag solves the problem.
On Monday, 19 September 2016 at 19:36:22 UTC, Karabuta wrote:
On Monday, 19 September 2016 at 19:29:25 UTC, A D dev wrote:
On Monday, 19 September 2016 at 17:42:51 UTC, A D dev wrote:
Hi list,
What blogs about D do you read?
To be more clear:
- what blogs that include posts on D, would you
On Wednesday, 17 August 2016 at 10:47:54 UTC, Guillaume Piolat
wrote:
On Wednesday, 17 August 2016 at 10:45:01 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
Is there any way I can log to a terminal or a file from inside
an @nogc function?
Thanks,
Saurabh
import core.stdc.stdio;
printf("am logging C-style\n");
D
Is there any way I can log to a terminal or a file from inside an
@nogc function?
Thanks,
Saurabh
On Tuesday, 2 August 2016 at 08:16:48 UTC, Sean Campbell wrote:
On Tuesday, 2 August 2016 at 07:24:28 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
Just of the top of my head, using ugly string mixins, this:
auto myConverterFunc(Args...)(Args args)
{
string genCode()
{
string code
On Tuesday, 2 August 2016 at 08:20:22 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
On Tuesday, 2 August 2016 at 08:16:48 UTC, Sean Campbell wrote:
[...]
Thanks. Yes that is one approach. I figured out another
approach that seems decent:
auto targetFunctionProxy(Args...)(Args args)
{
import std.meta;
ret
How can I substitute the type of an argument received via a
varadic template?
For example say I want to generalise this scenario:
auto myConverterFunction1(bool arg1, bool arg2, ubyte arg3, int
arg4)
{
return targetFunction(cast(ubyte)arg1, cast(ubyte)arg2, arg3,
arg4);
}
So I'll have
On Sunday, 24 July 2016 at 07:54:11 UTC, Jonathan Marler wrote:
On Thursday, 21 July 2016 at 13:37:30 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
On Thursday, 21 July 2016 at 12:42:14 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
On Thursday, 21 July 2016 at 09:41:27 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
Java 8 has a 'default' keyword that allows
On Thursday, 21 July 2016 at 12:42:14 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
On Thursday, 21 July 2016 at 09:41:27 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
I have an interface A which declares a certain function. A
second interface B inherits from A and wishes to provide a
default implementation for that function.
You can
I have an interface A which declares a certain function. A second
interface B inherits from A and wishes to provide a default
implementation for that function. How can I achieve this? I'm
facing an error when I try this:
interface A
{
int func(int);
}
interface B : A
{
final int func(
On Friday, 10 June 2016 at 13:36:43 UTC, Alex Bothe wrote:
On Friday, 10 June 2016 at 12:51:34 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
I have foolishly updated my Xamarin Studio and now the D
Language Binding no longer works.
Is there an update to fix this? Or should I downgrade?
Thanks,
Saurabh
Hi there,
I have foolishly updated my Xamarin Studio and now the D Language
Binding no longer works.
Is there an update to fix this? Or should I downgrade?
Thanks,
Saurabh
On Sunday, 22 May 2016 at 09:07:32 UTC, Guillaume Piolat wrote:
On Sunday, 22 May 2016 at 07:40:08 UTC, Nicholas Wilson wrote:
On Saturday, 21 May 2016 at 09:43:38 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
I see that 'cent' and 'ucent' are reserved for future use but
not yet implemented. Does anyone have a worki
On Saturday, 21 May 2016 at 21:51:34 UTC, Jonathan M Davis wrote:
On Saturday, May 21, 2016 09:43:38 Saurabh Das via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
I see that 'cent' and 'ucent' are reserved for future use but
not yet implemented. Does anyone have a working implementation
o
I see that 'cent' and 'ucent' are reserved for future use but not
yet implemented. Does anyone have a working implementation of
these types?
Alternatively, is there an any effort towards implementation of
arbitrary-sized integers in Phobos?
Thanks,
Saurabh
On Sunday, 15 May 2016 at 13:25:42 UTC, Michael wrote:
Well I'm pretty sure the code was working just fine earlier in
the week at the office, but running the code at home with the
newest version of DMD started producing these odd results.
Typing this function into asm.dlang.org shows a minor d
On Sunday, 15 May 2016 at 13:01:45 UTC, Michael wrote:
It may be that I'm doing something wrong here, but after
updating DMD to the latest version, my simulations started
producing some very odd results and I think I've pinpointed it
to a sign inversion that I was making. Here is some code from
On Saturday, 13 February 2016 at 19:24:44 UTC, ishwar wrote:
I am stumped on need finding interval between two events in a
program execution in nanoseconds. Any sample code will be
appreciated (along with imports needed to make it work):
- time in nanoseconds-now
- do-some processing
- time in
On Wednesday, 10 February 2016 at 00:24:56 UTC, tsbockman wrote:
[...]
`Tuple.slice` is corrupting data *right now*.
Some sort of short-term fix should be merged in the next
release of D.
+1
On Sunday, 7 February 2016 at 02:51:49 UTC, tsbockman wrote:
On Sunday, 7 February 2016 at 02:11:15 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
I understand that. We just have a different perspective on the
problem. Your priorities:
- don't break what's not broken
- .slice! lends on opSlice and should return by r
On Saturday, 6 February 2016 at 08:01:20 UTC, tsbockman wrote:
On Saturday, 6 February 2016 at 06:34:05 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
[...]
I should also point out that, since there is no way to actually
find out whether anyone is using the `ref`-ness of the return
type in the wild, the approach t
On Friday, 5 February 2016 at 19:16:11 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
Am Fri, 05 Feb 2016 05:31:15 +
schrieb Saurabh Das :
[...]
That is enlightening. I have updated the PR at
https://github.com/D-Programming-Language/phobos/pull/3975 to
incorporate these changes.
On Friday, 5 February 2016 at 05:18:01 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
Apologies for spamming. This is an improved implementation:
@property
Tuple!(sliceSpecs!(from, to)) slice(size_t from, size_t
to)() @safe const
if (from <= to && to <= Types.length)
{
On Friday, 5 February 2016 at 05:18:01 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
[...]
PS: Additionally, '@trusted' can now be substituted with '@safe'.
On Thursday, 4 February 2016 at 17:52:16 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15645
Is this a possible fixed implementation? :
@property
Tuple!(sliceSpecs!(from, to)) slice(size_t from, size_t
to)() @trusted const
if (from <= to && to <= Ty
On Thursday, 4 February 2016 at 17:52:16 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=15645
Thank you.
I understood why this is happening from your explanation in the
bug report.
On Thursday, 4 February 2016 at 12:28:39 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
This code:
[...]
Update: Simplified, this also doesn't work:
void main()
{
import std.typecons;
auto tp = tuple(10, false, "hello");
auto u0 = tp.slice!(0, tp.length);
auto u1 = tp.slice!(1, tp.length);
auto
This code:
void main()
{
import std.typecons;
auto tp = tuple!("a", "b", "c")(10, false, "hello");
auto u0 = tp.slice!(0, tp.length);
auto u1 = tp.slice!(1, tp.length);
auto u2 = tp.slice!(2, tp.length);
static assert(is(typeof(u0) == Tuple!(int, "a", bool, "b",
string,
On Wednesday, 3 February 2016 at 12:10:01 UTC, Marc Schütz wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 February 2016 at 10:16:56 UTC, Saurabh Das
wrote:
[...]
It used to work in 2.066.1; bisecting points to this PR:
https://github.com/D-Programming-Language/phobos/pull/3043
When bisecting between 2.066 and 2.067,
struct A
{
import std.stdio;
File f;
}
struct B
{
A a;
import std.typecons;
mixin Proxy!a;
}
rdmd proxytest.d:
/Library/D/dmd/src/phobos/std/typecons.d(5055): Error:
'proxytest.A.~this' is not nothrow
/Library/D/dmd/src/phobos/std/typecons.d(5050): Error: function
'proxyt
On Thursday, 28 January 2016 at 04:27:31 UTC, Enjoys Math wrote:
I'm not looking for anything advanced, just serialization of
some of my own types (classes & structs).
I've seen:
http://wiki.dlang.org/Review/std.serialization
However, I don't see std.serialization in my dmd source tree:
v2.070
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 17:10:39 UTC, data pulverizer
wrote:
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 16:01:33 UTC, wobbles wrote:
Interesting that reading a file is so slow.
Your timings from R, is that including reading the file also?
Yes, its just insane isn't it?
It is insane. Earlier in
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 14:32:52 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 13:42:11 UTC, Edwin van Leeuwen
wrote:
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 09:39:30 UTC, data pulverizer
wrote:
StopWatch sw;
sw.start();
auto buffer = std.file.readText("Acquisition_2009Q2.txt");
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 13:42:11 UTC, Edwin van Leeuwen
wrote:
On Thursday, 21 January 2016 at 09:39:30 UTC, data pulverizer
wrote:
StopWatch sw;
sw.start();
auto buffer = std.file.readText("Acquisition_2009Q2.txt");
auto records = csvReader!row_type(buffer, '|').array;
sw.stop
On Monday, 11 January 2016 at 12:59:05 UTC, Tobi G. wrote:
On Monday, 11 January 2016 at 12:15:55 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
Any ideas?
Yes. Because Typedef is introducing new Types, which csvReader
doesn't know what they are,
you'll need a little workaround and cast the values yourself.
impo
On Monday, 11 January 2016 at 12:01:30 UTC, Tobi G. wrote:
On Monday, 11 January 2016 at 08:03:19 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
How can I get std.conv to understand std.typecons.Typedef?
You can do something like this:
QuestionId q = to!(TypedefType!QuestionId)("43");
In general, is there a bette
I am trying to create 2 types which contain integral values but
should not be compatible with each other. std.typecons.Typedef
seems perfect for this:
alias QuestionId = Typedef!(long, long.init, "QuestionId");
alias StudentId = Typedef!(long, long.init, "StudentId");
However I'm failing to us
On Wednesday, 16 December 2015 at 10:07:38 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
On Wednesday, 16 December 2015 at 09:38:24 UTC, Ali Çehreli
wrote:
On 12/16/2015 01:26 AM, Saurabh Das wrote:
struct xlref
{
ushort rwFirst;
ushort rwLast;
ubyte colFirst;
ubyte colLast;
}
struct xlmref
{
On Wednesday, 16 December 2015 at 09:38:24 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 12/16/2015 01:26 AM, Saurabh Das wrote:
struct xlref
{
ushort rwFirst;
ushort rwLast;
ubyte colFirst;
ubyte colLast;
}
struct xlmref
{
ushort count;
xlref reflist;
}
Mac OS X (dmd 2.069.0)
=
struct xlref
{
ushort rwFirst;
ushort rwLast;
ubyte colFirst;
ubyte colLast;
}
struct xlmref
{
ushort count;
xlref reflist;
}
Mac OS X (dmd 2.069.0)
===
dmd dprob.d
Segmentation fault: 11
Windows (dmd 2.069.2)
==
dmd -v -m64 dprob.d
binar
On Thursday, 21 May 2015 at 14:12:25 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
If you're looking for speed, how about ldc?
Absolutely - we are working on getting it to compile on ldc
and/or gdc.
fair enough. I thought normally you'd want to have some sort of
expression simplification in genetic programming, to avoid
adding too many superfluous degrees of freedom? Aside from the
obvious problems, those extra degrees of freedom can put you at
risk of overfitting.
Yes - our evaluation
PS: The original expression:
http://dpaste.dzfl.pl/raw/e7a66aa067ab
double someFunction(double AvgPriceChangeNormalized, double
DayFactor, double TicksTenMinutesNormalized)
{
return
AvgPriceChangeNormalized)*(0.0868))*((DayFactor)*(TicksTenMinutesNormalized)))*(((AvgPriceChangeNormali
and please submit to https://issues.dlang.org
Submitted: https://issues.dlang.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14613
That expression is, not to put too fine a point on it, mad.
The operator precedence itself is giving me a headache, let
alone the division of a double by a boolean... I'm pretty sure
it
Thanks!
Wow, dustmite is really useful. It reduces the expression down to:
double someFunction(double AvgPriceChangeNormalized, double
TicksTenMinutesNormalized)
{
return
(TicksTenMinutesNormalized?1:AvgPriceChangeNormalized)?1:TicksTenMinutesNormalized/(TicksTenMinutesNormalized==0)==0;
Hello,
We have been working on a genetic programming project, and
occasionally the compiler fails and gives an internal error. I've
captured and reduced one of these down to a single expression.
See http://dpaste.dzfl.pl/e7a66aa067ab (reduced_expr.d)
When I compile this file using: dmd -c -O
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