On Friday, 18 April 2014 at 03:54:46 UTC, Rikki Cattermole wrote:
On Thursday, 17 April 2014 at 15:50:04 UTC, Graham Fawcett
wrote:
To clarify: you've built these tools in D? Or do the tools
provide some kind of D API to MongoDB?
Best,
Graham Fawcett (not the 3T software Graham; last names
On Tuesday, 22 April 2014 at 06:41:58 UTC, Manu via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On 22 April 2014 16:29, Jacob Carlborg via
Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
On 22/04/14 07:57, Manu via Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
Yeah, I understand the license options
On Friday, 25 April 2014 at 19:51:22 UTC, Adam Wilson wrote:
I know we don't place much value in TIOBE and it's brethren.
However, I thought that this was a milestone worthy of a note
anyways.
http://www.tiobe.com/index.php/content/paperinfo/tpci/index.html
It's interesting that C++ has
On Friday, 9 May 2014 at 19:48:20 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
Hi folks,
We at Facebook are very excited about the upcoming DConf 2014.
In fact, so excited we're considering livestreaming the event
for the benefit of the many of us who can't make it to Menlo
Park, CA. Livestreaming
On Wednesday, 21 May 2014 at 16:36:02 UTC, Kapps wrote:
The stream is currently live at
http://www.ustream.tv/channel/dconf-2014
Looking forward to watching the Meyers keynote and most of the
other talks today. How did the panel go yesterday? Wish I could
have watched it.
On Thursday, 22 May 2014 at 10:09:28 UTC, Nordlöw wrote:
We at Facebook are very excited about the upcoming DConf 2014.
Will the videos be available afterwards at Andreis Youtube
stream like last year?
I don't think it's certain yet, but here's what the MC James
Pearce said in the chat
On Tuesday, 27 May 2014 at 02:51:51 UTC, Nick B wrote:
Hi
Can any one advise when we can expect the conference talks (and
perhaps the slides as well) to available to download or via
Utube
?
I saw some of the streamed talks, but would love to view the
rest.
The MC said initially that
On Tuesday, 27 May 2014 at 10:00:01 UTC, Szymon Gatner wrote:
On Tuesday, 6 May 2014 at 19:58:10 UTC, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
On 5/6/2014 9:11 AM, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
On Tuesday, 6 May 2014 at 12:40:48 UTC, Szymon Gatner wrote:
Any way to see the TOC?
Hmm, not on the website yet but here it
On Wednesday, 4 June 2014 at 06:19:05 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/27911b/conversation_with_andrei_alexandrescu_all_things/
wtf, the Mid Quality video is 1280x720 resolution HD video,
guess they think every programmer has a super-fast internet
On Wednesday, 4 June 2014 at 06:13:39 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
Of possible interest.
http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/278twt/panel_systems_programming_in_2014_and_beyond/
Andrei
Nice panel. Not much really new there, but gives an idea of what
you language designers are
On Thursday, 5 June 2014 at 21:15:40 UTC, Olivier Henley wrote:
On Thursday, 5 June 2014 at 16:33:49 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
https://news.ycombinator.com/newest
http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/27e5d7/dconf_day_1_talk_3_a_real_d_in_programming/
On Tuesday, 10 June 2014 at 17:19:42 UTC, Dicebot wrote:
On Tuesday, 10 June 2014 at 15:37:11 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
Watch, discuss, upvote!
https://news.ycombinator.com/newest
https://twitter.com/D_Programming/status/476386465166135296
On Saturday, 14 June 2014 at 06:07:08 UTC, Nick Sabalausky wrote:
I doubt it. First, it's the backend that's not technically OSI,
frontend was (apparently) GPL. Second, I can't imagine any
Linux distro rejecting GPL - they'd have to boot the kernel and
core utils, too.
Actually, the frontend
On Saturday, 14 June 2014 at 17:07:58 UTC, Leandro Lucarella
wrote:
No free license restrict commercial use. What using boost
enable is only
proprietary use, i.e. changing the DMD FE and keeping the
changes
private, even if you distribute the binary with the compiled
DMDFE. As I
said before,
On Sunday, 15 June 2014 at 01:08:00 UTC, Leandro Lucarella wrote:
Joakim, el 14 de June a las 19:31 me escribiste:
The frontend was dual-licensed under the Artistic license,
which
also allows such proprietary use, so nothing has really
changed.
Mmm, even when is true that the Artistic
On Monday, 16 June 2014 at 17:26:51 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
https://news.ycombinator.com/newest
https://www.facebook.com/dlang.org/posts/867399893273693
https://twitter.com/D_Programming/status/478588866321203200
On Tuesday, 17 June 2014 at 17:10:16 UTC, Mengu wrote:
On Monday, 16 June 2014 at 22:14:01 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
The reddit response this year hasn't been particularly
impressive it seems to me compared to last year :(
r/programming and hn is all about rust and go. on hn many d
posts are
On Thursday, 19 June 2014 at 03:23:15 UTC, Saurabh Das wrote:
I find it impossible to even find the posts on HN. Within a few
hours of them being posted by Andrei, they are buried 4-5 pages
deep in the 'new' section with very few upvotes.
This search for DConf finds 5 of the 7 talks posted so
On Thursday, 19 June 2014 at 11:04:25 UTC, Jacob Carlborg wrote:
My connection is specified to 10 Mbps. But it depends on how
large the files are. Most of the files from DConf are under
around 350MB in HD quality. On the other hand, Andrei's talk
from LangNext 2014 is 1.3 GB and 48 minutes
On Thursday, 19 June 2014 at 12:16:20 UTC, Joakim wrote:
Sorry, I just noticed that you were only talking about HD
quality. I don't know where you're getting the 350 MB figure,
as all the HD recordings on archive.org are about 6-800 GB, but
600 to 800 MB, not GB. :)
On Tuesday, 15 July 2014 at 16:20:34 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/2aruaf/dconf_2014_keynote_high_performance_code_using_d/
https://www.facebook.com/dlang.org/posts/885322668148082
https://twitter.com/D_Programming/status/489081312297635840
Will
On Tuesday, 22 July 2014 at 15:39:39 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
Vote
https://twitter.com/D_Programming/status/491608304171634688
https://www.facebook.com/dlang.org/posts/889263017754047
http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/2bei5x/dconf_2014_declarative_programming_in_d_by/
Just finished watching this talk for the second time, as I was
distracted by IRC when watching the livestream. Good talk,
though not as great as last year's from Don, which was the best
one given at DConf 2013. This quote struck me when watching
live, from the 40:35 mark of the video, and
On Thursday, 7 August 2014 at 23:36:59 UTC, Brian Schott wrote:
Tags and DUB support for all of this will happen when I get
around to it. (Or when you get around to it and make a pull
request)
libdparse: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/libdparse
* The lexer/parser/ast code for D written in D
On Thursday, 7 August 2014 at 19:15:00 UTC, Jacob Carlborg wrote:
On 2014-08-07 19:15, Dicebot wrote:
And here I also mean that all other Windows builds of
compilers /
interpreters I have used / tried passed that simple sanity
test. Some
may require complicated setup to do complicated things
On Thursday, 7 August 2014 at 23:36:59 UTC, Brian Schott wrote:
Tags and DUB support for all of this will happen when I get
around to it. (Or when you get around to it and make a pull
request)
libdparse: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/libdparse
* The lexer/parser/ast code for D written in D
On Sunday, 17 August 2014 at 13:01:07 UTC, bearophile wrote:
ketmar:
are you sure that you have latest git then? yes, i know that
this is very silly question, but sometimes... ;-)
OK, -m32mscoff works (probably I was using a wrongly written
switch), but I don't see it listed among the other
On Friday, 29 August 2014 at 02:10:48 UTC, Manu via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
Does this 2.67 release contain COFF32, and the new package fix?
Yes to COFF32, though it's still undocumented in the help at the
moment:
https://github.com/D-Programming-Language/dmd/commits/2.067
No to the
On Monday, 22 September 2014 at 13:23:33 UTC, simendsjo wrote:
My guess is the average for developers is ~8GB. 2GB RAM is
really not
enough for pretty much anything these days - the browser alone
easily
chews 3-4GB on moderate use.
You have to admit that this is ridiculous. I updated to the
On Wednesday, 26 November 2014 at 23:16:11 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 11/26/2014 11:35 AM, Ali Çehreli wrote:
I wonder whether Smashwords would allow me to also provide
the book for free
on my site?
Found the answer to that question:
6c. Free Copies. As administrator of your work, Author
On Monday, 15 December 2014 at 10:25:18 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
- Removed the unrelated Turkish menu from the English pages
- Improved the ebook formats
- Removed the download page and linked the ebook versions
directly from the main page instead
I consider these beta quality:
On Friday, 19 December 2014 at 01:00:30 UTC, Kiith-Sa wrote:
It's not a dethroner for the Unreal Engine 4, but I try my best
to get it into work. It's current name is VDP engine, but if
you
can come up with a better name I might change it. I still
haven't
decided to make it open or closed
On Friday, 19 December 2014 at 11:35:54 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 07:22:13 +
Joakim via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
This is the model used by Android, the most successful open
source project ever
i can assure
On Friday, 19 December 2014 at 15:05:05 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Fri, 19 Dec 2014 14:46:33 +
Joakim via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
On Friday, 19 December 2014 at 11:35:54 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Fri
On Friday, 19 December 2014 at 17:21:43 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
it is still unusable. i don't care what problems samsung or
other oem
have, as i still got the closed proprietary system.
Not exactly, as the flourishing Android ROM scene shows. While
many people also
On Saturday, 20 December 2014 at 11:57:49 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
i still can't understand how buying
closed proprietary crap supports FOSS. and android is still
proprietary
system with opened source, not FOSS.
I'll tell you how. First off, all the external OSS
On Saturday, 20 December 2014 at 15:48:59 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Sat, 20 Dec 2014 15:02:57 +
Joakim via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
I'll tell you how. First off, all the external OSS projects
that AOSP builds on, whether
On Saturday, 20 December 2014 at 18:49:06 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Sat, 20 Dec 2014 17:12:46 +
Joakim via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
Why would we collect stats: what difference does it make if an
OSS project is 10
On Sunday, 21 December 2014 at 15:44:05 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Sun, 21 Dec 2014 07:54:53 +
Joakim via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d-announce@puremagic.com wrote:
That still doesn't answer the question of why anyone would
spend time collecting stats when it's
Sigh, I did ask you some questions, which you've answered with a
couple more questions, so I'll give you one last response.
On Sunday, 21 December 2014 at 18:52:00 UTC, ketmar via
Digitalmars-d-announce wrote:
On Sun, 21 Dec 2014 18:24:12 +
Joakim via Digitalmars-d-announce
digitalmars-d
On Monday, 2 February 2015 at 05:17:40 UTC, Jerry Morrison wrote:
On Monday, 2 February 2015 at 03:50:10 UTC, Joakim wrote:
C and C++ are very general-purpose, but they can still be
considered as a niche of performance languages. What's
wrong with D aiming for that niche?
Most uses of C
On Wednesday, 14 January 2015 at 14:42:09 UTC, Jacob Carlborg
wrote:
On 2015-01-14 09:46, Iain Buclaw via Digitalmars-d-announce
wrote:
I can't comment on that. Maybe via Macports? Otherwise if
BSD have
their own linker, someone will need to go and get friendly
with the
developers up
On Friday, 20 February 2015 at 02:21:01 UTC, Brian Schott wrote:
dfmt is a D source code formatting tool.
https://github.com/Hackerpilot/dfmt/
https://github.com/Hackerpilot/dfmt/releases/tag/v0.1.0
Thanks, you should list some of the formatting changes it makes
in the README.
On Friday, 20 February 2015 at 05:53:32 UTC, Brian Schott wrote:
On Friday, 20 February 2015 at 05:23:45 UTC, Joakim wrote:
On Friday, 20 February 2015 at 02:21:01 UTC, Brian Schott
wrote:
dfmt is a D source code formatting tool.
https://github.com/Hackerpilot/dfmt/
On Thursday, 22 January 2015 at 06:47:13 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
Thursday, January 22, 2015, 6pm
Many people you know from the forums will be there. Andrei is
giving a presentation as well:
http://www.meetup.com/D-Lang-Sillicon-Valley/events/219413448/
Will there be a video or writeup
On Sunday, 1 February 2015 at 01:17:41 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
Hello,
Walter and I have been mulling for a while on a vision for the
first six months of 2015.
http://wiki.dlang.org/Vision/2015H1
This is stuff we consider important for D going forward and
plan to work actively on.
On Monday, 2 February 2015 at 01:43:02 UTC, Jerry Morrison wrote:
On Monday, 2 February 2015 at 00:58:53 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
On 2/1/15 3:52 PM, Jerry Morrison wrote:
The other big thing missing from the Vision doc is picking a
niche,
That may as well come later - or not at all.
On Tuesday, 6 January 2015 at 14:38:21 UTC, Dicebot wrote:
It will be really cool when same package will be reused by DMD
itself :P
I believe ddmd has passed all tests on most platforms for a long
time now, so there is nothing stopping those building from source
from using ddmd now. :)
On Tuesday, 13 January 2015 at 07:30:22 UTC, Brad Anderson wrote:
On Tuesday, 13 January 2015 at 00:22:33 UTC, Mike wrote:
I have a suggestion for any compiler implementers: How about
a talk on how to get started hacking the compiler. Something
that may lower the entry barrier and encourage
On Monday, 30 March 2015 at 00:20:11 UTC, Laeeth Isharc wrote:
https://www.quora.com/Why-didnt-D-language-become-mainstream-comparing-to-Golang
fwiw
Nice, well-written answer, enjoyed reading it.
On Sunday, 29 March 2015 at 17:30:39 UTC, Foo wrote:
On Sunday, 29 March 2015 at 17:24:53 UTC, Joakim wrote:
Hmm, this sounds like it might be a bug or design flaw.
debug is supposed to provide an escape hatch from even pure
functions: I don't see why it wouldn't provide the same for
@nogc
On Monday, 23 February 2015 at 01:14:29 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
Here's the newest This Week in D, the big news being ddmd and
the dmd beta.
http://arsdnet.net/this-week-in-d/feb-22.html
The tip of this week has to do with installation: as a
Slackware user, the new download page made me
On Monday, 18 May 2015 at 02:20:02 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote:
On 5/17/15 6:56 PM, Walter Bright wrote:
Because we have to give the head count to caterer on Tuesday.
http://dconf.org/2015/registration.html
Time to stop procrastinating! See you there!
Also, to registrants and speakers:
On Thursday, 4 June 2015 at 15:04:05 UTC, Vladimir Panteleev
wrote:
http://beta.forum.dlang.org/
Many major and minor improvements.
Man, I think we found the ultimate bikeshed topic for D, with 113
replies in one day. :)
There is a bug in the currently deployed DFeed forum with Chrome
on
On Friday, 19 June 2015 at 22:47:03 UTC, Brad Anderson wrote:
Walter: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=znjesAXEEqw
Brian: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmFyB9e7edw
Daniel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5daHGXSetXk
I've only just started watching but the editing seems to be
well done so
On Saturday, 30 May 2015 at 05:08:18 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
Why not DConf is carried out twice a year!? :)
E.g. in May and in November. It would be really great. Please
think
about it!
Hmm, there may be a little disconnect here. Organizing
conferences costs money, which currently
On Thursday, 2 July 2015 at 10:26:36 UTC, Dmitry Olshansky wrote:
On 29-Jun-2015 06:46, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
http://arsdnet.net/this-week-in-d/jun-28.html
I should have probably said on the day one - AMA.
P.S. Thanks to Joakim for editing my stream of consciousness
into this tidy text ;)
On Sunday, 23 August 2015 at 05:17:33 UTC, Walter Bright wrote:
https://github.com/D-Programming-Language/dmd/pull/4923
We have made the switch from C++ DMD to D DMD!
Many, many thanks to Daniel Murphy for slaving away for 2.5
years to make this happen. More thanks to Martin Nowak for
On Sunday, 2 August 2015 at 22:53:00 UTC, Walter Bright wrote:
Seeing the threads on London, Silicon Valley and Berlin
meetups, is there any interest for a Seattle one?
btw, the Silicon Valley Meetup doesn't show up on this nice
little worldwide map of Dlang Meetups on their website:
On Monday, 20 July 2015 at 17:26:31 UTC, Matt Kline wrote:
With the general push to make more of Phobos use lazily
evaluated ranges, Walter's DConf talk, and even C++ moving
towards ranges (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXBcwcF3ln4), I
wrote a small article with a case study examining their
On Sunday, 25 October 2015 at 03:22:39 UTC, Joakim wrote:
On Saturday, 24 October 2015 at 15:40:41 UTC, Jack Stouffer
wrote:
That's surprising given that many were worried that switching
to ddmd would slow compilation speeds down by at least 30%.
Also, this does not seem to be using any of
On Saturday, 24 October 2015 at 15:40:41 UTC, Jack Stouffer wrote:
On Saturday, 24 October 2015 at 03:11:30 UTC, Joakim wrote:
The associated travis CI run that finally went green with ldc
0.16.0 beta 2 took about as long as the other D compilers, so
performance of ldc-compiled ddmd seems
On Friday, 23 October 2015 at 20:10:17 UTC, Jack Stouffer wrote:
On Thursday, 22 October 2015 at 19:00:07 UTC, Kai Nacke wrote:
Hi everyone,
LDC 0.16.0, the LLVM-based D compiler, is available for
download!
Congratulations!
Has anyone on the LDC team done any benchmarks on how much
faster
On Thursday, 22 October 2015 at 20:54:01 UTC, Marco Leise wrote:
Am Thu, 22 Oct 2015 06:10:56 -0700
schrieb Walter Bright :
On 10/21/2015 3:40 PM, Laeeth Isharc wrote:
> Have you thought about writing up your experience with
> writing fast json? A bit like
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, 28 October 2015 at 08:01:29 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
Although the book will always be free[1], many of you have
expressed a need to pay without having to buy the paper version.
The ebook versions are now available at Gumroad:
https://gum.co/PinD
The price is the very
On Monday, 16 November 2015 at 15:20:51 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
http://erdani.com/d/downloads.daily.png
There have been 1677 dmd downloads per day (net after
discounting Travis CI) on average over the past 28 days (i.e.
four weeks ending Sunday, November 15).
That's a new all-times
On Monday, 16 November 2015 at 00:40:33 UTC, The Old One wrote:
With the World turning to IOT, and most startups having an
embedded system as at least a part of their offering, even old
languages should take this seriously. Not everybody actually
fathoms the size of this tsunami, or the
On Thursday, 12 November 2015 at 02:21:08 UTC, Fer22f wrote:
On Sunday, 1 November 2015 at 09:50:16 UTC, Joakim wrote:
https://github.com/joakim-noah/android/releases/tag/runners
You can install a test runner app or run a command-line binary.
This is from a Moto Maxx (it's a Droid Maxx
I'm happy to announce test runners for Android ARM, which will
run most tests from druntime and phobos on your Android device:
https://github.com/joakim-noah/android/releases/tag/runners
You can install a test runner app or run a command-line binary.
Please report your results in this thread
On Sunday, 1 November 2015 at 18:41:26 UTC, Martin Nowak wrote:
On 11/01/2015 10:50 AM, Joakim wrote:
http://forum.dlang.org/thread/bafrkjfwmoyriyhmq...@forum.dlang.org
Nice works for me as well (Galaxy S3 on cm-12.1 (5.1.1)).
Would be nice to run this as automated test on an Android
Great, your last announcement was linked in reddit comments about
the 2.069 release, when asked about iOS support.
On Thursday, 5 November 2015 at 08:05:39 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
Just noticed that tvOS and watchOS are now present in LLVM, so
I think support for these could be added to LDC soon
On Thursday, 5 November 2015 at 15:45:35 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
tvOS is essentially iOS and doesn't require bitcode (yet) like
watchOS. I am looking at adding it soon because Xcode 7 enables
it by default.
I just looked it up, their official docs say bitcode is required
for both tvOS and
On Saturday, 7 November 2015 at 12:23:18 UTC, Andre Polykanine
wrote:
Hello Joakim,
JvDda>
http://wiki.dlang.org/Build_LDC_for_Android#Build_a_sample_OpenGL_Android_app_ported_to_D
No way to do this on Windows, am I right?
Not using this cross-compiler build for a linux/x86 host, no.
On Saturday, 7 November 2015 at 20:34:06 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
Joakim writes:
Hmm, that's strange, this commit didn't fix the 64-bit issues
for you? I believe it fixed them for me on Android/ARM:
On Saturday, 7 November 2015 at 19:20:02 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
Dan Olson writes:
Joakim writes:
btw, std.internal.math.gammafunction hasn't given me a
problem since 2.067.1, the Win64 guys fixed it. 2.068 added
a function that needs a CTFE-able
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 20:10:36 UTC, Jakob Ovrum wrote:
Thanks for the thorough instructions! LLVM is rather massive
and I'd prefer to avoid building it if I can, so I downloaded
the pre-built LDC binary from the release page. However, the
binary is 32-bit and depends on libconfig,
On Wednesday, 4 November 2015 at 01:50:38 UTC, Martin Nowak wrote:
Glad to announce D 2.069.0.
http://dlang.org/download.html
http://downloads.dlang.org/releases/2.x/2.069.0/
This is the first release with a self-hosted dmd compiler and
comes with even more rangified phobos functions,
On Sunday, 1 November 2015 at 09:50:16 UTC, Joakim wrote:
You can build ldc from source yourself using the patches
linked. I will soon make available a cross-compiler build of
ldc on linux/x86 and write up the process of building
everything, including the test runner apk, on the wiki.
I've
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 09:04:05 UTC, Timur Gafarov wrote:
Atrium (code name) is a work-in-progress science fiction game
with physics based puzzles (gravity effects, force fields, etc)
akin to Portal or Inverto. The game is fully written in D, it
uses custom graphics engine based on
On Thursday, 5 November 2015 at 07:44:48 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
This is another set of binaries and universal libs for the
experimental LDC iOS cross-compiler. It is now based on LDC
0.16.1 (2.067.1) and LLVM 3.6.2.
https://github.com/smolt/ldc-iphone-dev/releases/tag/ios-0.16.1-151104
btw,
https://github.com/joakim-noah/android/releases/tag/runners
You will need a linux/x86 host and the Android NDK, optionally
the SDK if you want to create a GUI app. A slightly older build
was used to create the test runners from earlier this week. You
can use this cross-compiler to build
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 20:10:36 UTC, Jakob Ovrum wrote:
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 11:56:35 UTC, Joakim wrote:
[...]
Thanks for the thorough instructions! LLVM is rather massive
and I'd prefer to avoid building it if I can, so I downloaded
the pre-built LDC binary from the release
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 20:41:11 UTC, Jakob Ovrum wrote:
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 20:24:18 UTC, Joakim wrote:
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 20:10:36 UTC, Jakob Ovrum wrote:
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 11:56:35 UTC, Joakim wrote:
[...]
Thanks for the thorough instructions! LLVM
On Wednesday, 7 October 2015 at 22:33:09 UTC, Martin Nowak wrote:
First beta for the 2.069.0 release.
http://dlang.org/download.html#dmd_beta
http://dlang.org/changelog/2.069.0.html
Please report any bugs at https://issues.dlang.org
-Martin
I just noticed that you added the beta to the
On Wednesday, 8 July 2015 at 13:56:37 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
On 7/8/15 6:29 AM, ZombineDev wrote:
Andrei Alexandrescu
--
Keynote: Generic Programming Must Go
dconf link: http://dconf.org/2015/talks/alexandrescu.html
video link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mCrVYYlFTrA
On Friday, 10 July 2015 at 20:38:16 UTC, Rishub Nagpal wrote:
On Thursday, 9 July 2015 at 06:32:28 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
I've made a set of binaries and universal libs for the LDC iOS
cross-compiler. It is based on LDC 0.15.1 (2.066) and LLVM
3.5.1.
On Friday, 10 July 2015 at 20:42:02 UTC, Dmitry Olshansky wrote:
On 10-Jul-2015 23:34, Joakim wrote:
On Thursday, 2 July 2015 at 10:26:36 UTC, Dmitry Olshansky
wrote:
On 29-Jun-2015 06:46, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
http://arsdnet.net/this-week-in-d/jun-28.html
I should have probably said on the
On Thursday, 2 July 2015 at 10:26:36 UTC, Dmitry Olshansky wrote:
On 29-Jun-2015 06:46, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
http://arsdnet.net/this-week-in-d/jun-28.html
I should have probably said on the day one - AMA.
P.S. Thanks to Joakim for editing my stream of consciousness
into this tidy text ;)
On Monday, 24 August 2015 at 18:43:01 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu
wrote:
Hello everyone,
Following an increasing desire to focus on working on the D
language and foundation, I have recently made the difficult
decision to part ways with Facebook, my employer of five years
and nine months.
On Tuesday, 1 September 2015 at 21:45:32 UTC, Kai Nacke wrote:
Hi all!
LLVM 3.7 has been released some minutes ago! See the release
notes here:
http://llvm.org/releases/3.7.0/docs/ReleaseNotes.html
Downloads: http://llvm.org/releases/download.html#3.7.0
Also note that LDC is mentioned in
On Tuesday, 22 September 2015 at 12:39:48 UTC, Per Nordlöw wrote:
On Wednesday, 16 September 2015 at 14:07:17 UTC, Atila Neves
wrote:
http://code.dlang.org/my_packages/reggae
What's new:
Atila
If you want to build a really revolutionary *new* build system
you should turn reggae into a
On Saturday, 12 December 2015 at 08:25:21 UTC, Walter Bright
wrote:
On 12/11/2015 10:13 PM, Joakim wrote:
Desktop Android's certainly not there yet for everybody, but
it is for my
admittedly low demands, and soon will be for everybody, as
google has said
they're working on built-in
On Monday, 14 December 2015 at 15:01:36 UTC, Nick Sabalausky
wrote:
On 12/12/2015 01:13 AM, Joakim wrote:
Desktop Android's certainly not there yet for everybody, but
it is for
my admittedly low demands, and soon will be for everybody, as
google has
said they're working on built-in
On Friday, 11 December 2015 at 19:59:54 UTC, Russel Winder wrote:
On Tue, 2015-12-08 at 15:50 -0800, Walter Bright via
Digitalmars-d- announce wrote:
2. Load up a tablet with lots of books.
Or a real laptop so you can do Real Programming – which of
course must be in FORTRAN.
I know you're
On Saturday, 12 December 2015 at 05:46:15 UTC, Walter Bright
wrote:
On 12/11/2015 8:28 PM, Joakim wrote:
and a bluetooth keyboard
Just to nit pick, using an external keyboard makes it more of a
laptop than a tablet.
A nitpick for a nitpick is fair game. :)
However, there are distinct
On Monday, 4 January 2016 at 09:26:39 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
Joakim writes:
On Thursday, 31 December 2015 at 00:11:34 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
[...]
Sounds good, submit a PR and let's get it in.
Was planning to get that PR going then got side tracked by a
more difficult
On Tuesday, 5 January 2016 at 20:39:02 UTC, Laeeth Isharc wrote:
On Monday, 28 December 2015 at 01:17:15 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
[...]
Fantastic news, Dan.
I can confirm that D also runs on Android Wear (Huawei watch)
and passes all unit tests. Forgive the slight hijack, but I
mention this
On Thursday, 31 December 2015 at 10:10:20 UTC, Jacob Carlborg
wrote:
On Wednesday, 30 December 2015 at 20:55:44 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
I'm going to start with Plan B.1 though because LLVM does nice
optimizations for TLS.
What is Plan B.1?
--
/Jacob Carlborg
Getting it into llvm:
On Thursday, 31 December 2015 at 00:11:34 UTC, Dan Olson wrote:
On Wednesday, 30 December 2015 at 23:11:06 UTC, Joakim wrote:
That sounds like this issue I ran into with ARM EH:
https://github.com/ldc-developers/ldc/issues/489#issuecomment-143560075
I was able to work around it by disabling
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