On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 12:39:57 UTC, Johan Engelen
wrote:
It should really be mentioned in the documentation of
toHexString, with an actual example instead of a unittest.
Do you use my dpldocs.info? I add such notes there from time to
time:
http://dpldocs.info/experimental-docs/s
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 13:06:08 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
the variable you are assigning the result to never does
anything with regard to overloads or template args.
Gotcha, thanks.
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 12:29:54 UTC, Johan Engelen
wrote:
Wouldn't something like this be possible?
`T toHexString(string toHexString(Order order =
Order.increasing, LetterCase letterCase = LetterCase.upper,
T)(.) if (T == string)`
I'm not sure what that's supposed to be.
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 12:20:14 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
This is a pretty common pitfall (and IMO one of the most
egregious design flaws in the language), I see it all the time.
I write very little D code, so I guess it had to happen at some
point then. Man, this is really bad :
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 12:20:14 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
It is neither, the compiler chose the right overload (remember,
overloads are chosen based on the arguments alone, the type you
specify for the variable holding the return value isn't a
consideration there) and the implemen
On Wednesday, 21 September 2016 at 12:07:31 UTC, Johan Engelen
wrote:
string a = toHexString(hash);
This is a pretty common pitfall (and IMO one of the most
egregious design flaws in the language), I see it all the time.
toHexString, when given a static array, returns a static array,
bu
What's the bug in the following code:
```d
import std.digest.md;
import std.stdio;
pragma(inline, false) // just in case
string getHash()
{
ubyte[16] hash = [1,2,3,4,5,6,6,78,8,8,7,7,6,3,2,3];
string a = toHexString(hash);
return a;
}
pragma(inline, false) // just in case
void destr