On Saturday, 29 October 2016 at 21:47:35 UTC, Mergul wrote:
On Sunday, 24 January 2016 at 15:12:30 UTC, Joakim wrote:
An alpha release of ldc, the llvm-based D compiler, for
Android devices is now available. It is best used with the
excellent Termux app
On Tuesday, 1 November 2016 at 13:33:02 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
android_app.savedState appears to be defined here:
https://github.com/joakim-noah/android/blob/polish/android_native_app_glue.d#L56
It's a void *. So comparing against null with != is identical
to !is.
There are
On Wednesday, 2 November 2016 at 09:35:20 UTC, Vadim Lopatin
wrote:
On Monday, 31 October 2016 at 22:33:38 UTC, Karabuta wrote:
On Friday, 28 October 2016 at 08:28:41 UTC, Vadim Lopatin
wrote:
Hello,
I've open sourced my project SoundTab:
https://github.com/buggins/soundtab/
I've
On Monday, 31 October 2016 at 01:27:08 UTC, Martin Nowak wrote:
Glad to announce D 2.072.0.
http://dlang.org/download.html
This is the release ships with the latest version of dub
(v1.1.0), comes
with lots of phobos additions and native TLS on OSX.
See the changelog for more details.
On Wednesday, 2 November 2016 at 15:08:26 UTC, anonymous wrote:
On Wednesday, 2 November 2016 at 12:36:45 UTC, Johan Engelen
wrote:
LDC built with DMD 2.072.0 gives the following error when run:
object.Error@src/rt/minfo.d(356): Cyclic dependency between
module ddmd.traits and ddmd.cond
On Wednesday, 2 November 2016 at 12:36:45 UTC, Johan Engelen
wrote:
LDC built with DMD 2.072.0 gives the following error when run:
object.Error@src/rt/minfo.d(356): Cyclic dependency between
module ddmd.traits and ddmd.cond
ddmd.traits* ->
ddmd.attrib ->
ddmd.cond* ->
ddmd.expression ->
On Tuesday, 1 November 2016 at 16:40:42 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
On 11/01/2016 11:41 AM, Johan Engelen wrote:
On Monday, 31 October 2016 at 01:27:08 UTC, Martin Nowak wrote:
Glad to announce D 2.072.0.
DMD 2.072.0 miscompiles/uncovers a bug in LDC, so I switched
back to DMD
2.071.2
On Monday, 31 October 2016 at 03:51:16 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
So far, getting content for the blog has, with a few
exceptions, been a process of sending out emails prompted by
activity on my radar. This is no problem when it comes to
project highlights or other fairly broad topics, but it's