On Saturday, 25 May 2019 at 12:59:50 UTC, Timur Gafarov wrote:
bindbc-nuklear expects nuklear.so in /usr/local/lib.
That's important! I changed my symlink in `/usr/local/lib` from
`libnuklear.so` to `nuklear.so` and it works now.
On Saturday, 25 May 2019 at 12:59:50 UTC, Timur Gafarov wrote:
bindbc-nuklear expects nuklear.so in /usr/local/lib. Or you can
compile Dagon without optional libraries, using "Minimal"
subconfiguration in your dub.json:
"subConfigurations": {
"dagon": "Minimal"
}
Fonts and GUI will be una
I'm trying to use Dagon (https://github.com/gecko0307/dagon) for
what I thought would be a simple enough project.
Initially the one thing I needed to do was to install Nuklear and
Freetype 2.8.1 `Under other OSes you have to install them
manually` as I'm running on Ubuntu.
I'm using dub and th
On Wednesday, 20 June 2018 at 22:46:16 UTC, infinityplusb wrote:
I'm trying to reacquaint myself with D, and Vibe in particular.
I notice that some of my previous working apps now don't work.
While going through the tour.dlang page, I can't seem to get
any of those sample apps working either. N
I'm trying to reacquaint myself with D, and Vibe in particular.
I notice that some of my previous working apps now don't work.
While going through the tour.dlang page, I can't seem to get any
of those sample apps working either. Nor do the apps in Vibe's
github page appear to be up to date with
On Sunday, 4 February 2018 at 08:33:20 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Sunday, 4 February 2018 at 08:17:31 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
Assuming this is OpenCV ...
it is, everyone keeps saying writing bindings in D is super easy
...
I feel this is a slight simplification. :(
version(Windows)
exter
Hi all
I'm looking to try and write an interface to C++, but given I'm a
casual dabbler in D, it's slightly beyond my current ability in
terms of both C++ and D!
As a leg up, how would one translate something like this from C++
to D?
`typedef int (CV_CDECL* CvCmpFunc)(const void* a, const
On Tuesday, 13 May 2014 at 04:26:04 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 05/12/2014 08:47 PM, InfinityPlusB wrote:
> I want to be able to name the rows, as they are built.
First, no, you cannot name variables at run time because
variables are concepts of source code; they don't exist in the
compiled pr
On Tuesday, 13 May 2014 at 03:54:33 UTC, safety0ff wrote:
You should look into associative arrays (
http://dlang.org/hash-map .)
Example:
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
int[][string] mybobs;
mybobs["bob_1"] = [-1, -1, 1, -1, -1];
mybobs["bob_2"] = [-1, 1, 1, 1, -1];
Hi clever people
I'm trying to do something which I thought would be easy.
Read a file in, and for every row, create a array.
I want to be able to name the rows, as they are built.
So when row 1 is read in I get
int[] bob_1 = new int[0];
when the second row is read in, I get
int[] bob_2 = new in
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