On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 23:00:46 UTC, Ivan Kazmenko wrote:
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 16:34:44 UTC, Dennis Ritchie
wrote:
And why in D copied only the first 32767 characters of the
string? I'm more days couldn't understand what was going on...
To me, it looks like a bug somewhere, tho
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 23:00:46 UTC, Ivan Kazmenko wrote:
To me, it looks like a bug somewhere, though I don't get where
exactly. Is it in bits of DigitalMars C/C++ compiler code
glued into druntime?
As far as I understand, the bug is in snn.lib's scanf.
snn.lib is Digital Mars's impl
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 16:34:44 UTC, Dennis Ritchie wrote:
And why in D copied only the first 32767 characters of the
string? I'm more days couldn't understand what was going on...
To me, it looks like a bug somewhere, though I don't get where
exactly. Is it in bits of DigitalMars C/C+
On 2015-03-21 at 22:15, FG wrote:
On 2015-03-21 at 21:02, Dennis Ritchie wrote:
In what universe?! Which OS, compiler and architecture?
Windows 8.1 x64, dmd 2.066.1:
That's strange. I cannot recreate the problem on Win7 x64 with dmd 2.066.1,
neither when compiled for 32- nor 64-bit. I have s
On 2015-03-21 at 21:02, Dennis Ritchie wrote:
In what universe?! Which OS, compiler and architecture?
Windows 8.1 x64, dmd 2.066.1:
That's strange. I cannot recreate the problem on Win7 x64 with dmd 2.066.1,
neither when compiled for 32- nor 64-bit. I have saved the a's to a file and
use inp
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 15:05:56 UTC, Ivan Kazmenko wrote:
Generate a 10-character string:
-
import std.range, std.stdio;
void main () {'a'.repeat (10).writeln;}
-
Try to copy it with D scanf and printf:
-
import std.stdio;
void main () {
char [10] a;
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 19:09:59 UTC, FG wrote:
In what universe?! Which OS, compiler and architecture?
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 19:09:59 UTC, FG wrote:
In what universe?! Which OS, compiler and architecture?
Windows 8.1 x64, dmd 2.066.1:
import std.range, std.stdio;
void main (
On 2015-03-21 at 16:05, Ivan Kazmenko wrote:
Generate a 10-character string
[...]
Try to copy it with D scanf and printf:
-
import std.stdio;
void main () {
char [10] a;
scanf ("%s", a.ptr);
printf ("%s\n", a.ptr);
}
-
Only 32767 first characters of the string are
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 15:05:56 UTC, Ivan Kazmenko wrote:
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 14:31:20 UTC, Dennis Ritchie
wrote:
In C++ it is fully working:
char s[25], t[25];
scanf("%s%s", s, t);
Indeed.
And why in D copied only the first 32767 characters of the
string? I'm more
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 14:31:20 UTC, Dennis Ritchie wrote:
In C++ it is fully working:
char s[25], t[25];
scanf("%s%s", s, t);
Indeed.
Generate a 10-character string:
-
import std.range, std.stdio;
void main () {'a'.repeat (10).writeln;}
-
Try to copy it with D
In C++ it is fully working:
char s[25], t[25];
scanf("%s%s", s, t);
http://codeforces.com/contest/527/submission/10376381?locale=en
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 12:08:05 UTC, anonymous wrote:
Please go into more detail about how it doesn't work.
Task:
http://codeforces.com/contest/527/problem/B?locale=en
It works:
char[200010] s, t;
s = readln.strip;
t = readln.strip;
http://codeforces.com/contest/527/submission/1037739
On Saturday, 21 March 2015 at 08:37:59 UTC, Dennis Ritchie wrote:
Tell me, please, why this code works correctly always:
[...]
And this code works correctly is not always:
import std.stdio;
readf("%s\n", &n);
char[200010] s, t;
scanf("%s%s", s.ptr, t.ptr);
Please go into more detail about
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