On Friday, 1 September 2017 at 09:14:30 UTC, aberba wrote:
On Thursday, 31 August 2017 at 14:43:22 UTC, thinwybk wrote:
There is no single point of entry to find information about
how to use D on ARM Linux. I created a small project on GitHub
https://github.com/fkromer/d-on-embedded-linux-arm
On Thursday, 31 August 2017 at 14:43:22 UTC, thinwybk wrote:
The project is in sync with a GitBook page
https://fkromer.gitbooks.io/d-on-embedded-linux-arm/content/.
d-on-embedded-linux-arm.de
On Friday, 8 September 2017 at 11:52:48 UTC, Joakim wrote:
rdmd and dub are now bundled with the native ldc package for
Termux, so you can easily write small scripts in D on your
phone or build and run tools like DScanner from the D package
repository at code.dlang.org.
Cool:
pkg search ldc
On Sunday, 3 September 2017 at 16:17:37 UTC, thinwybk wrote:
In the beginning porting some of the C++ classes from
https://github.com/derekmolloy/exploringBB/tree/master/chp06
could be a good starting point.
...the complete C++ HAL can be found here:
That's interesting. Might do some DIY robotics in future.
I would like to create a hardware abstraction layer for the
BeagleBone Black (the board I am playing around with in my spare
time which is very beginner friendly and flexible w.r.t. to
hardware interfaces due to a lot of "capes"
There is no single point of entry to find information about how
to use D on ARM Linux. I created a small project on GitHub
https://github.com/fkromer/d-on-embedded-linux-arm which shall
enable absolute beginners (of embedded Linux and D) to get
started as fast as possible. The project is in
I created a project on GitHub
(https://github.com/fkromer/d-design-patterns) which shall end up
containing examples of all common OOP design patterns implemented
in D. D beginners should be able to run the examples easily with
rdmd. (That's the reason why patterns should reside in a single