On Thursday, 5 June 2014 at 11:07:54 UTC, 1100110 wrote:
On 6/5/14, 6:05, 1100110 wrote:
On 5/31/14, 7:57, ed wrote:
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:28:32 UTC, Mineko wrote:
So, I've gotten interested in kernel programming in D.. And
as much as
I like C/C++, I wanna try innovating, I'm aware th
On 6/5/14, 6:05, 1100110 wrote:
On 5/31/14, 7:57, ed wrote:
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:28:32 UTC, Mineko wrote:
So, I've gotten interested in kernel programming in D.. And as much as
I like C/C++, I wanna try innovating, I'm aware that phobos/gc and any
OS-specific issues are going to be a
On 5/31/14, 7:57, ed wrote:
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:28:32 UTC, Mineko wrote:
So, I've gotten interested in kernel programming in D.. And as much as
I like C/C++, I wanna try innovating, I'm aware that phobos/gc and any
OS-specific issues are going to be a problem, but I'm willing to
imple
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 23:27:45 UTC, Qox wrote:
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:57:18 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
http://www.xomb.org/ ?
seems to be outdated, but its another OS written in D.
It's dead for only a year, the developer have probably graduated.
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 22:54:48 UTC, Qox wrote:
scope(exit) foo();
uses exception handling in the background.
That just works with dmd even in the bare metal environmnet.
Throwing an exception needs library support with dmd but you can
copy/paste it from druntime - I did that in my min
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:57:18 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
http://www.xomb.org/ ?
seems to be outdated, but its another OS written in D.
You should definitly use templating and CTFE for your advantage.
For example you could use the (compile time) component based
design to design (heap) allocators after a at cmpile time known
configuration. The possibilities of templating and compile time
code gen are enormous.
Instead of using
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:28:32 UTC, Mineko wrote:
So, I've gotten interested in kernel programming in D.. And as
much as I like C/C++, I wanna try innovating, I'm aware that
phobos/gc and any OS-specific issues are going to be a problem,
but I'm willing to implement them into the kernel i
On Saturday, 31 May 2014 at 07:28:32 UTC, Mineko wrote:
Any ideas? :P
Buy my book, chapter 11 talks about it a little to get you
started :P
http://www.packtpub.com/discover-advantages-of-programming-in-d-cookbook/book
The summary of my approach there is:
1) Use a regular linux compiler an
http://www.xomb.org/ ?
So, I've gotten interested in kernel programming in D.. And as
much as I like C/C++, I wanna try innovating, I'm aware that
phobos/gc and any OS-specific issues are going to be a problem,
but I'm willing to implement them into the kernel itself.
So, I guess what I'm asking is this: What should
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