On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 21:37:59 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 11/1/21 2:28 PM, pascal111 wrote:
> This can serve the style I want.
I am feeling funny right now and showing incorrect code. It's
impossible to fit "Hello World!" in "xyz". As Steve said, don't
do that. :)
> It uses OOP styl
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 21:32:21 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 11/1/21 2:01 PM, Ali Çehreli wrote:
> The program is as incorrect as its C equivalent would be. ;)
I wrote a cool function to make it easy to disregard memory
safety:
import std.stdio;
auto assumedLength(S)(ref S slice) {
s
On 11/1/21 2:28 PM, pascal111 wrote:
> This can serve the style I want.
I am feeling funny right now and showing incorrect code. It's impossible
to fit "Hello World!" in "xyz". As Steve said, don't do that. :)
> It uses OOP style like C++ by putting a
> pointer as a property,
D's slices are
On 11/1/21 2:01 PM, Ali Çehreli wrote:
> The program is as incorrect as its C equivalent would be. ;)
I wrote a cool function to make it easy to disregard memory safety:
import std.stdio;
auto assumedLength(S)(ref S slice) {
struct LengthSetter {
void opAssign(size_t length) {
// N
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 21:01:31 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 11/1/21 1:49 PM, pascal111 wrote:
> Yes, I'm practicing doing things in low level style like
standard C.
All you needed extra was to let the slice know about the new
length:
import std.stdio;
import core.stdc.string;
void mai
On 11/1/21 1:49 PM, pascal111 wrote:
> Yes, I'm practicing doing things in low level style like standard C.
All you needed extra was to let the slice know about the new length:
import std.stdio;
import core.stdc.string;
void main() {
char[] s="xyz".dup;
strcpy(&s[0], "Hello World!");
s =
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 20:15:14 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
On 11/1/21 3:56 PM, pascal111 wrote:
But what if I want to use "strcpy" function to assign that new
value to the array that the problem is that the array won't
take more than its first initializing value length:
{
char[
On 11/1/21 3:56 PM, pascal111 wrote:
But what if I want to use "strcpy" function to assign that new value to
the array that the problem is that the array won't take more than its
first initializing value length:
{
char[] s="xyz".dup;
strcpy(&s[0], "Hello World!");
writeln(s);
}
Result:
I know that I can use the next syntax to assign new value to char
dynamic array, and the new value isn't in same length of the
current value of the array:
{
char[] s="xyz".dup;
s="Hello World!".dup;
writeln(s);
}
Result:
Hello World!
=
But what if I want to use "strcp
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 16:01:38 UTC, rikki cattermole
wrote:
I think you are wanting this?
https://dlang.org/phobos/core_cpuid.html#.processor
Oh thx my bad I did not see it!
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 16:02:20 UTC, Paul Backus wrote:
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 16:00:05 UTC, Arsium wrote:
Hello,
Currently, I'm working to implement myself WinAPI functions.
However, I could not find anything matching with : __cpuid
like : https://gist.github.com/boxmein/7d8e5
Hello,
Currently, I'm working to implement myself WinAPI functions.
However, I could not find anything matching with : __cpuid like
: https://gist.github.com/boxmein/7d8e5fae7febafc5851e
Any idea ?
I think you are wanting this?
https://dlang.org/phobos/core_cpuid.html#.processor
On Monday, 1 November 2021 at 16:00:05 UTC, Arsium wrote:
Hello,
Currently, I'm working to implement myself WinAPI functions.
However, I could not find anything matching with : __cpuid
like : https://gist.github.com/boxmein/7d8e5fae7febafc5851e
Any idea ?
Not sure if it's exactly the same
On Sunday, 31 October 2021 at 03:51:49 UTC, James Blachly wrote:
On 10/29/21 7:10 AM, Stanislav Blinov wrote:
On Friday, 29 October 2021 at 11:05:14 UTC, Imperatorn wrote:
On Thursday, 28 October 2021 at 01:39:10 UTC, Thomas Gregory
wrote:
I am a maintainer of the
[dhtslib](https://github.com/
15 matches
Mail list logo