On Thu, Aug 04, 2022 at 11:52:48PM +, pascal111 via Digitalmars-d-learn
wrote:
> On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 21:35:37 UTC, Adam D Ruppe wrote:
> > On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 21:15:39 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
> > > > https://github.com/adamdruppe/arsd/blob/master/terminal.d
> > >
> > > How c
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 22:54:42 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
I didn't notice that all what we needs to pop a range forward
is just a slice, yes, we don't need variable here.
Ranges and Slices are not the same thing. Slicing an array is
easy. This is a language possibility. For example, you n
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 02:20:31 UTC, Steven Schveighoffer
wrote:
On 8/4/22 9:51 PM, Paul Backus wrote:
Another option: use -vcg-ast, and have the compiler tell you
what it's actually calling. It's not ignoring that line, it's
just not doing what you think it's doing.
The output's not tha
On 8/4/22 9:51 PM, Paul Backus wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:47:07 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
I found the issue: opOpAssign isn't getting called at all. I have no
idea why, though.
Given that the example works, the problem must be in some other part of
your code that you haven'
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:53:42 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:38:48 UTC, jfondren wrote:
Here's a complete example that passes tests:
```d
struct S {
int n;
void opOpAssign(string op)(S rhs) if (op == "/") {
n++;
}
}
Nevermind. I have t
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:51:21 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:47:07 UTC, Ruby The Roobster
wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:42:23 UTC, jfondren wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:38:48 UTC, jfondren wrote:
Here's a complete example that passes tests:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:47:07 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
I found the issue: opOpAssign isn't getting called at all. I
have no idea why, though.
Given that the example works, the problem must be in some other
part of your code that you haven't posted. If you can post a more
compl
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:47:07 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:42:23 UTC, jfondren wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:38:48 UTC, jfondren wrote:
Here's a complete example that passes tests:
```d
struct S {
int n;
void opOpAssign(string op)(S rhs) i
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:42:23 UTC, jfondren wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:38:48 UTC, jfondren wrote:
Here's a complete example that passes tests:
```d
struct S {
int n;
void opOpAssign(string op)(S rhs) if (op == "/") {
n++;
}
}
unittest {
auto a = S(1),
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 23:11:36 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
One of problems faced me in C programming is hacking data with
C code that some hackers do with C code which make me needs
more tools to protect my C code, but I don't have good
resources in my current time, while I noticed that D cod
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:38:48 UTC, jfondren wrote:
Here's a complete example that passes tests:
```d
struct S {
int n;
void opOpAssign(string op)(S rhs) if (op == "/") {
n++;
}
}
unittest {
auto a = S(1), b = S(2);
a /= b;
b /= a;
assert(a.n == 2);
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:25:50 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:23:40 UTC, Ruby The Roobster
wrote:
[SNIP]
Any function other than an operator overload seems to work
fine.
Also, this isn't mentioned in the spec.
Additional Information:
Fails for both DMD an
On Friday, 5 August 2022 at 01:23:40 UTC, Ruby The Roobster wrote:
[SNIP]
Any function other than an operator overload seems to work fine.
Also, this isn't mentioned in the spec.
Additional Information:
Fails for both DMD and LDC on Windows x86_64 for dmd v2.100.1
How do I get unittests to actually execute operator overloads?
E.g.:
```d
struct Struct
{
void opOpAssign(string op)(Struct rhs) //Assume that the
operator `/=` is implemented here
{
//...
}
}
unittest
{
Struct a = Struct(1);
Struct b = Struct(2);
a /= b;
as
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 21:35:37 UTC, Adam D Ruppe wrote:
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 21:15:39 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
https://github.com/adamdruppe/arsd/blob/master/terminal.d
How can I use this terminal module? Is there a document for it?
http://arsd-official.dpldocs.info/arsd.termin
One of problems faced me in C programming is hacking data with C
code that some hackers do with C code which make me needs more
tools to protect my C code, but I don't have good resources in my
current time, while I noticed that D code is more secure than C
code by mean it will be more useful t
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 20:59:50 UTC, Johan wrote:
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 20:29:30 UTC, Jan Allersma wrote:
So something goes wrong with linking, but I dont know what.
Execute `dmd -v` on some test program. It will output the
linker line at the end of the output, the line starti
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 22:14:26 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 8/4/22 11:05, frame wrote:
> `popFront()`
The function was this:
void popFront() {
students = students[1 .. $];
}
> copies all
> elements except the first one into the variable (and
overwrites it), so
>
On 8/4/22 11:05, frame wrote:
> `popFront()`
The function was this:
void popFront() {
students = students[1 .. $];
}
> copies all
> elements except the first one into the variable (and overwrites it), so
> it moves the data forward.
That would be very slow. :) What act
On 8/4/22 06:08, pascal111 wrote:
> In next code from
> "https://www.tutorialspoint.com/d_programming/d_programming_ranges.htm";,
That page seems to be adapted from this original:
http://ddili.org/ders/d.en/ranges.html
> we have two issues:
>
> 1) Why the programmer needs to program "empty()"
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 21:15:39 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 November 2021 at 05:43:05 UTC, harakim wrote:
https://github.com/adamdruppe/arsd/blob/master/terminal.d
How can I use this terminal module? Is there a document for it?
It is part of the arsd-official package, availa
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 21:15:39 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
https://github.com/adamdruppe/arsd/blob/master/terminal.d
How can I use this terminal module? Is there a document for it?
http://arsd-official.dpldocs.info/arsd.terminal.html
https://forum.dlang.org/post/bjldcmojboremdrok...@forum.dlang.org
On Wednesday, 3 November 2021 at 05:43:05 UTC, harakim wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 November 2021 at 01:39:02 UTC, H. S. Teoh wrote:
On Wed, Nov 03, 2021 at 01:33:28AM +, dangbinghoo via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 N
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 20:29:30 UTC, Jan Allersma wrote:
So something goes wrong with linking, but I dont know what.
Execute `dmd -v` on some test program. It will output the linker
line at the end of the output, the line starting with `cc
yourcode.o -o yourcode ...`. On that linker l
Hello,
I am trying to compile an application with both C++ and D source
code.
First I have `main.d`:
```
extern (C++) void init();
extern (C++) void draw(int row, int column, int x, int y);
extern (C++) void render();
void main() {
init();
draw(3, 3, 0, 0);
draw(3, 3, 2, 2);
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 13:08:21 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
1) Why the programmer needs to program "empty()", "front()",
and "popFront()" functions for ranges while they exist in the
language library? it seems there's no need to exert efforts for
that. "https://dlang.org/phobos/std_range_prim
On Thursday, 4 August 2022 at 13:08:21 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
```D
import std.stdio;
import std.string;
struct Student {
string name;
int number;
string toString() const {
return format("%s(%s)", name, number);
}
}
struct School {
At DConf '22 day 3 Robert Schadek presented at around 07:22:00 in
the YT video the function `splitIds`. Given an HTML page from
bugzilla containing a list of issues `splitIds` aims at
extracting all bug-ids referenced within a specific url context:
```
long [] splitIds (string page)
{
enum
In next code from
"https://www.tutorialspoint.com/d_programming/d_programming_ranges.htm";, we have two issues:
1) Why the programmer needs to program "empty()", "front()", and
"popFront()" functions for ranges while they exist in the
language library? it seems there's no need to exert efforts
Is there any implementation in phobos of something similar to
BigInt but for non-integers as well? If there isn't is there a
dub package that does this, and if so, which one?
On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 21:35:29 UTC, Ruby The Roobster
wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 19:11:51 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
[...]
No need for a code. See, there is a keyword called `ref`, that
can be used both in function parameters and in foreach loops,
and it is the equivalent of
On Thu, Aug 04, 2022 at 07:22:04AM +, Domain via Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
> On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 12:27:32 UTC, frame wrote:
> > On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 03:36:55 UTC, Domain wrote:
> > > I want to find out all public functions in all modules in a package.
> > > Can I do that a
On 8/4/22 00:57, pascal111 wrote:
> I don't see my post.
Some posts are blocked by the spam filter. (Apparently, your message did
not have a sender name and cannot be passed because of that.)
Ali
On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 21:37:50 UTC, jfondren wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 19:11:51 UTC, pascal111 wrote:
[...]
I agree to the extent that I wanted to do so, and might still
have if a delivery hadn't interrupted by post. But one way to
encourage others to put in more effort
On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 12:27:32 UTC, frame wrote:
On Wednesday, 3 August 2022 at 03:36:55 UTC, Domain wrote:
I want to find out all public functions in all modules in a
package. Can I do that at compile time?
You can do something like that:
```d
static foreach (sym; __traits(allMember
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