On Friday, 28 March 2014 at 14:34:52 UTC, Jacob Carlborg wrote:
On 28/03/14 13:48, Rikki Cattermole wrote:
In theory there should be no reason it cannot. Assuming its
not doing
something like reading files (note you can catch this and say
not at CTFE).
Proof that a preprocessor can be used fo
On 28/03/14 13:48, Rikki Cattermole wrote:
In theory there should be no reason it cannot. Assuming its not doing
something like reading files (note you can catch this and say not at CTFE).
Proof that a preprocessor can be used for this [0].
You can use a string import to read a file.
--
/Jaco
On Friday, 28 March 2014 at 11:59:47 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
If it's just a preprocessor, I guess string mixins with delight
don't compile.
In theory there should be no reason it cannot. Assuming its not
doing something like reading files (note you can catch this and
say not at CTFE).
Proof that
If it's just a preprocessor, I guess string mixins with delight
don't compile.
On Friday, 28 March 2014 at 10:11:52 UTC, Peter Plantinga wrote:
Just out of interest, but any plans to convert blocks of
delight code in a file and output the resulting D version?
Also will that work at CTFE?
Actually that's the way it works now. The program always
outputs D code. You can
Just out of interest, but any plans to convert blocks of
delight code in a file and output the resulting D version? Also
will that work at CTFE?
Actually that's the way it works now. The program always outputs
D code. You can also choose to pass it through to a D compiler.
Since the code ju
On Friday, 28 March 2014 at 07:20:31 UTC, Peter Plantinga wrote:
The D programming language is great, and it is starting to get
the recognition it deserves. I've seen it reach the top 20 in
many different measures of language popularity.
What it is though, is a systems language. Of course it h