On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 22:30:52 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
1) Improve as a programmer
2) Have fun doing programs
Thats it basically. I am planning to study all "free" time I
have. I am doing basically this since last year.
Try Basic. It has builtin graphics, seeing you program draw is
quit
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 09:43:20 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 22:30:52 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
1) Improve as a programmer
2) Have fun doing programs
Thats it basically. I am planning to study all "free" time I
have. I am doing basically this since last year.
Try Basi
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 09:43:20 UTC, Kagamin wrote:
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 22:30:52 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
1) Improve as a programmer
2) Have fun doing programs
Thats it basically. I am planning to study all "free" time I
have. I am doing basically this since last year.
Try Basi
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 23:42:10 UTC, SashaGreat wrote:
About Mike's book, you're talking about this one:
https://www.amazon.com/Learning-D-Michael-Parker/dp/1783552484/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&qid=1448974911&sr=8-1&keywords=learning+d&linkCode=sl1&tag=aldacron-20&linkId=d696b771c78030fc27
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 03:59:23 UTC, Bert wrote:
But if you really want to learn to program I suggest you go
with Haskell. You can do them all together too but Haskell is
like learning Alien while D is learning German.
There's nothing wrong with Haskell if you want to take a deep
dive
Thank you. I'll try that.
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 18:38:02 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
Hi everyone,
I would like an honest opinion.
I have a beginner level (able to do very small programs) in a
few languages such as python, go, C, guile(scheme) and common
lisp. I want to pick a language and go deep with it and focus
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 15:17:11 UTC, a11e99z wrote:
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 18:38:02 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
Hi everyone,
I would like an honest opinion.
I have a beginner level (able to do very small programs) in a
few languages such as python, go, C, guile(scheme) and common
lis
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 15:42:08 UTC, a11e99z wrote:
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 15:17:11 UTC, a11e99z wrote:
[...]
imo better choice is (with criteria to find best job)
- Qt:
C++ with any library that u need in one style
- C#:
web, graphics, mobiles, command tools with nice la
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 16:23:51 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 15:42:08 UTC, a11e99z wrote:
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 15:17:11 UTC, a11e99z wrote:
Right now, job is not a good criteria for me. I work in a not
related field and I doubt I would get any job worki
I'm having some trouble with a "Program exited with code
-1073741819" error in some code I'm writing and I would
appreciate any help/insight.
The problem stems from some incompatibility between the Phobos
function "choose" and the template function "myFilter" which
returns a range. The code b
On 01.08.19 22:23, Matt wrote:
Version 4 does not work when PairedA.previous is null. I'd love to
understand why.
[...]
auto myFilter(R1, R2)(R1 a, R2 b)
{
import std.algorithm : filter, canFind;
return a.filter!(c => b.canFind(c));
}
struct A
{
uint[] starts, stops;
im
On Thursday, 1 August 2019 at 21:12:51 UTC, ag0aep6g wrote:
`choose`'s parameters aren't lazy. So the second argument is
evaluated even when `previous is null`. That means
`intervalRange` is called on a null `previous`. And that fails,
of course, because `intervalRange` can't access `starts` or
On Thu, 2019-08-01 at 14:49 +, bachmeier via Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
[…]
> There's nothing wrong with Haskell if you want to take a deep
> dive into pure functional programming. I personally find Haskell
> to be more of a religion than a programming language. You can
> learn the same pers
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 18:38:02 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
Hi everyone,
I would like an honest opinion.
I have a beginner level (able to do very small programs) in a
few languages such as python, go, C, guile(scheme) and common
lisp. I want to pick a language and go deep with it and focus
I have spent the better part of 10 years with C, and it was my
first serious language. I would say go with D if you just want to
work on higher level projects and forego the low level details to
an extent. C is very low level and very unforgiving. The
inexperienced will run into things like seg
On Wednesday, 31 July 2019 at 22:30:52 UTC, Alexandre wrote:
My goals:
1) Improve as a programmer
2) Have fun doing programs
That's it basically. I am planning to study all "free" time I
have. I am doing basically this since last year.
Are you only considering D and C or just mentioning the
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