Hi clever people
I'm trying to do something which I thought would be easy.
Read a file in, and for every row, create a array.
I want to be able to name the rows, as they are built.
So when row 1 is read in I get
int[] bob_1 = new int[0];
when the second row is read in, I get
int[] bob_2 = new
On Tuesday, 13 May 2014 at 03:54:33 UTC, safety0ff wrote:
You should look into associative arrays (
http://dlang.org/hash-map .)
Example:
import std.stdio;
void main()
{
int[][string] mybobs;
mybobs[bob_1] = [-1, -1, 1, -1, -1];
mybobs[bob_2] = [-1, 1, 1, 1, -1];
On Tuesday, 13 May 2014 at 04:26:04 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
On 05/12/2014 08:47 PM, InfinityPlusB wrote:
I want to be able to name the rows, as they are built.
First, no, you cannot name variables at run time because
variables are concepts of source code; they don't exist in the
compiled
I'm trying to reacquaint myself with D, and Vibe in particular.
I notice that some of my previous working apps now don't work.
While going through the tour.dlang page, I can't seem to get any
of those sample apps working either. Nor do the apps in Vibe's
github page appear to be up to date
On Wednesday, 20 June 2018 at 22:46:16 UTC, infinityplusb wrote:
I'm trying to reacquaint myself with D, and Vibe in particular.
I notice that some of my previous working apps now don't work.
While going through the tour.dlang page, I can't seem to get
any of those sample apps working either.
On Sunday, 4 February 2018 at 08:33:20 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Sunday, 4 February 2018 at 08:17:31 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
Assuming this is OpenCV ...
it is, everyone keeps saying writing bindings in D is super easy
...
I feel this is a slight simplification. :(
version(Windows)
Hi all
I'm looking to try and write an interface to C++, but given I'm a
casual dabbler in D, it's slightly beyond my current ability in
terms of both C++ and D!
As a leg up, how would one translate something like this from C++
to D?
`typedef int (CV_CDECL* CvCmpFunc)(const void* a, const
On Saturday, 25 May 2019 at 12:59:50 UTC, Timur Gafarov wrote:
bindbc-nuklear expects nuklear.so in /usr/local/lib. Or you can
compile Dagon without optional libraries, using "Minimal"
subconfiguration in your dub.json:
"subConfigurations": {
"dagon": "Minimal"
}
Fonts and GUI will be
On Saturday, 25 May 2019 at 12:59:50 UTC, Timur Gafarov wrote:
bindbc-nuklear expects nuklear.so in /usr/local/lib.
That's important! I changed my symlink in `/usr/local/lib` from
`libnuklear.so` to `nuklear.so` and it works now.
I'm trying to use Dagon (https://github.com/gecko0307/dagon) for
what I thought would be a simple enough project.
Initially the one thing I needed to do was to install Nuklear and
Freetype 2.8.1 `Under other OSes you have to install them
manually` as I'm running on Ubuntu.
I'm using dub and
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