Re: Forward declaration inside Function block, no error?

2019-01-07 Thread Steven Schveighoffer via Digitalmars-d-learn

On 1/7/19 12:20 AM, Jonathan M Davis wrote:

On Sunday, January 6, 2019 11:38:44 AM MST Benjamin Thaut via Digitalmars-d-
learn wrote:

Today I found a bug in my D code.


import std.stdio;

// Type your code here, or load an example.
void grow()
{
  writeln("grow");
}

void someFunc(bool condition)
{
  if(condition)
  {
  void grow();
  }
}


I tried to call the grow function, but accidentially copied the
return value alongside the function name. I was wondering why
this code compiles without errors. the "void grow();" becomes a
no-op. In my opinion this could should not compile. Am I missing
something here?


It would actually be useful if you could provide prototypes for extern(C)
functions that way (similar to how we can have local imports for modules and
thus avoid affecting the rest of the module), but unfortunately, that
doesn't currently work (even if the function declaration is marked with
static). It would also make sense if it allowed you to provide forward
declarations for nested functions, but that doesn't work either. So, I could
see uses cases where it would theoretically be useful to be able to declare
function prototypes inside of a function, but as it stands, AFAIK, it's
useless. It is arguably a case of "turtles all the way down," but since you
can't then do anything useful with the function prototype, it's currently
pretty pointless.



One could use it as a strawman, that's never called, but used for 
introspection.


I tried to use pragma(mangle), but it doesn't seem to work on inner 
functions (weird).


If I declare the pragma(mangle) outside the function, it works, but that 
doesn't help if the function actually needs the outer function context 
to operate.


Allowing forward declarations for nested functions would be nice.

-Steve


Re: Forward declaration inside Function block, no error?

2019-01-06 Thread Neia Neutuladh via Digitalmars-d-learn
On Sun, 06 Jan 2019 20:19:59 +, Rubn wrote:
> You can declare functions inside of functions in D. You weren't forward
> declare grow() in the module namespace, so much as you were forward
> declaring a new function grow.

Unfortunately, you can't do forward declarations for nested functions. If 
you could, that would be handy for mutual recursion:

void main()
{
int a(int i);
int b(int i)
{
if (i > 0) return a(i - 1);
return abs(i);
}
int a(int i)
{
if (i % 2 == 0) return b(i - 2);
return b(i - 1);
}
writeln(a(12));
}

Unfortunately, Error: declaration a is already defined

And omitting the forward declaration gets you: Error: undefined identifier 
a


Re: Forward declaration inside Function block, no error?

2019-01-06 Thread Rubn via Digitalmars-d-learn

On Sunday, 6 January 2019 at 18:38:44 UTC, Benjamin Thaut wrote:

Today I found a bug in my D code.


import std.stdio;

// Type your code here, or load an example.
void grow()
{
writeln("grow");
}

void someFunc(bool condition)
{
if(condition)
{
void grow();
}
}


I tried to call the grow function, but accidentially copied the 
return value alongside the function name. I was wondering why 
this code compiles without errors. the "void grow();" becomes a 
no-op. In my opinion this could should not compile. Am I 
missing something here?


Kind Regards
Benjamin Thaut


import std.stdio;

void grow()
{
writeln("grow");
}

void someFunc(bool condition)
{
if(condition)
{
void grow();
pragma(msg, grow.mangleof); // _D3app8someFuncFbZ4growMFZv
}
}

You can declare functions inside of functions in D. You weren't 
forward declare grow() in the module namespace, so much as you 
were forward declaring a new function grow.