On 26/02/2017 4:01 PM, ANtlord wrote:
Hello! I've encroutered intresting tool of DMD. It is dump of AST in
JSON format (dmd -X main.d). But I it contains only declaration of
methods, templates and structs. It doesn't contain statements like a
variables or nested functions inside function's body.
Hello! I've encroutered intresting tool of DMD. It is dump of AST
in JSON format (dmd -X main.d). But I it contains only
declaration of methods, templates and structs. It doesn't contain
statements like a variables or nested functions inside function's
body.
Is it possible to make dump with s
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 21:26:32 UTC, XavierAP wrote:
It's not GUI projects that I would plan to work on, just
something easy with basic functionality that I can use for my
own utilities or test clients for libraries. And if there's
anything with any kind of designer support (in which
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 19:59:29 UTC, ikod wrote:
Hello,
I have a method for range:
struct Range {
immutable(ubyte[]) _buffer;
size_t _pos;
@property void popFront() pure @safe {
enforce(_pos < _buffer.length, "popFront from empty
buffer");
_p
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 20:03:17 UTC, Jacob Carlborg
wrote:
There's no de factor library for creating GUIs in D. If you
want a native look and feel, DWT is a good option. If you want
the application to look the same on all platforms, there might
be other better suited alternatives.
I
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 20:49:51 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
A wrapper that unifies these 4 steps like enforce is pretty
easy to implement.
yeah easy to use exception in @nogc as long as the catch knows
to free it too.
Alas, not my case. Exception can be catched not in my code.
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 20:49:51 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe
wrote:
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 20:40:26 UTC, Eugene Wissner
wrote:
it builds and doesn't throw if I compile with:
dmd -release
though it causes a segfault, what is probably a dmd bug.
No, that's by design. assert(0) compiles
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 20:40:26 UTC, Eugene Wissner
wrote:
it builds and doesn't throw if I compile with:
dmd -release
though it causes a segfault, what is probably a dmd bug.
No, that's by design. assert(0) compiles to a segfault
instruction with -release.
A wrapper that unifies t
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 20:02:56 UTC, ikod wrote:
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 19:59:29 UTC, ikod wrote:
Hello,
I have a method for range:
struct Range {
immutable(ubyte[]) _buffer;
size_t _pos;
@property void popFront() pure @safe {
enforce(_pos <
On 2017-02-24 23:44, XavierAP wrote:
And second question, is DWT the de facto standard for creating GUIs? Or
are there good competitors.
There's no de factor library for creating GUIs in D. If you want a
native look and feel, DWT is a good option. If you want the application
to look the same
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 19:59:29 UTC, ikod wrote:
Hello,
I have a method for range:
struct Range {
immutable(ubyte[]) _buffer;
size_t _pos;
@property void popFront() pure @safe {
enforce(_pos < _buffer.length, "popFront from empty
buffer");
_p
On 2017-02-24 19:10, houdoux09 wrote:
The problem is that I can not retrieve the variables from the parent class.
Cast the value to the type of the base class and run it through the same
function. You can have a look at the Orange serialization library [1].
[1] https://github.com/jacob-carl
Hello,
I have a method for range:
struct Range {
immutable(ubyte[]) _buffer;
size_t _pos;
@property void popFront() pure @safe {
enforce(_pos < _buffer.length, "popFront from empty
buffer");
_pos++;
}
}
I'd like to have @nogc here, but I can't beca
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 15:13:27 UTC, Radu wrote:
Here is sample on how destroy fails with a fwd decl error:
struct A
{
B b;
C c;
}
struct B
{
Wrap!A val;
}
struct C
{
Wrap!A val;
}
struct Wrap(T)
{
this(bool b)
{
t = cast(T*) malloc(T.sizeof);
}
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 15:21:56 UTC, Radu wrote:
The correct way of doing it using deref would to look like:
struct A { int i; }
auto a = cast (A*) malloc(A.sizeof); // Allocate
emplace(a, 42); // Construct
destroy(*a); // Destruct A
free
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 13:18:21 UTC, Moritz Maxeiner
wrote:
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 13:14:24 UTC, Moritz Maxeiner
wrote:
---
struct A {}
auto a = cast (A*) malloc(A.sizeof); // Allocate
emplace(a, 42); // Construct
destroy(a); //
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 13:14:24 UTC, Moritz Maxeiner
wrote:
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 10:44:07 UTC, Radu wrote:
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 08:36:02 UTC, Ali Çehreli
wrote:
On 02/25/2017 12:17 AM, Radu wrote:
> destroy(cc) -> does c = C.init
> destroy(*cc); -> calls the C
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 14:34:31 UTC, rikki cattermole
wrote:
On 26/02/2017 3:31 AM, helxi wrote:
I am trying to create an array which has a user defined size.
However
the following program is not compiling:
import std.stdio;
void main(){
write("Enter your array size: ");
int
On 26/02/2017 3:31 AM, helxi wrote:
I am trying to create an array which has a user defined size. However
the following program is not compiling:
import std.stdio;
void main(){
write("Enter your array size: ");
int n;
readf(" %s", &n);
int[n] arr; //<-Error: variable input canno
I am trying to create an array which has a user defined size.
However the following program is not compiling:
import std.stdio;
void main(){
write("Enter your array size: ");
int n;
readf(" %s", &n);
int[n] arr; //<-Error: variable input cannot be read at
compile time
writ
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 11:06:28 UTC, data pulverizer
wrote:
I have noticed that some numerical packages written in D use
pointer semantics heavily (not referring to packages that link
to C libraries). I am in the process of writing code for a
numerical computing library and would like
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 13:14:24 UTC, Moritz Maxeiner
wrote:
---
struct A {}
auto a = cast (A*) malloc(A.sizeof); // Allocate
emplace(a, 42); // Construct
destroy(a); // Destruct
free(a); // Deallocate
---
Sorr
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 10:44:07 UTC, Radu wrote:
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 08:36:02 UTC, Ali Çehreli
wrote:
On 02/25/2017 12:17 AM, Radu wrote:
> destroy(cc) -> does c = C.init
> destroy(*cc); -> calls the C dtor
>
> Is this by design? If so - how can I destroy and get the dtor
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 11:15:53 UTC, ketmar wrote:
data pulverizer wrote:
I have noticed that some numerical packages written in D use
pointer semantics heavily (not referring to packages that link
to C libraries). I am in the process of writing code for a
numerical computing librar
data pulverizer wrote:
I have noticed that some numerical packages written in D use pointer
semantics heavily (not referring to packages that link to C
libraries). I am in the process of writing code for a numerical
computing library and would like to know whether there times when
addressing
I have noticed that some numerical packages written in D use
pointer semantics heavily (not referring to packages that link to
C libraries). I am in the process of writing code for a numerical
computing library and would like to know whether there times when
addressing an array using pointers c
On Saturday, 25 February 2017 at 08:36:02 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 02/25/2017 12:17 AM, Radu wrote:
> destroy(cc) -> does c = C.init
> destroy(*cc); -> calls the C dtor
>
> Is this by design? If so - how can I destroy and get the dtor
called
> without dereferencing the pointer?
It's by design
On 02/25/2017 12:17 AM, Radu wrote:
> destroy(cc) -> does c = C.init
> destroy(*cc); -> calls the C dtor
>
> Is this by design? If so - how can I destroy and get the dtor called
> without dereferencing the pointer?
It's by design because setting a pointer to null can be considered as
destroying
I'm puzzled by the way destroy works when passed a pointer to a
struct, observe:
--code.d--
int i;
struct C
{
this(ref int i)
{
++i;
ii = &i;
}
~this()
{
--(*i
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