Hi all,
anybody knows if there are functions (preferably) in Phobos, that
translate from unicode to other encodings and vice versa?
Johann
Aaa... how could this escape my attention. Thanks a lot.
```d
writeln (getSize(rom))
```
reports 478 bytes but since you work with ushorts (why? as far as
I can see, this is a 8 bit machine) you convert the read(rom)
into ushorts, which is only half in size:
```d
writeln (cast(ushort[])read(rom));
```
gives you 478/2 = 239 bytes
```d
this.memory[m
It seems that std library documentation lives in two different
directories.
https://dlang.org/phobos/
https://dlang.org/library/
Maybe it's due to historical reasons. Problem is, when I search
for a library function in Google, sometimes it points me to
library directory, and sometimes it poi
On Monday, 22 January 2018 at 15:32:29 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
http://dpldocs.info/writef
Thanks for your good work. I will file a bug report then.
Not related to this thread, but is something missing from this
page? Only "index" is shown on this page.
http://dpldocs.info/experimental-do
$ dub build -b release -v
Using dub registry url 'https://code.dlang.org/'
Refreshing local packages (refresh existing: true)...
Looking for local package map at
/var/lib/dub/packages/local-packages.json
Looking for local package map at
/home/john/.dub/packages/local-packages.json
Refreshing
hi,
i like to use a window gui library and i think i found a working
one.
https://github.com/FrankLIKE/dfl2 - works with x64
the problem is, that with DMD 2.069.0, VS2015 and visualD the
trick of using "-L/SUBSYSTEM:windows,6.00
-L/ENTRY:mainCRTStartup" does not suppress the console window
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 21:02:59 UTC, John Chapman wrote:
On Friday, 6 November 2015 at 15:52:10 UTC, johann wrote:
hi,
i like to use a window gui library and i think i found a
working one.
https://github.com/FrankLIKE/dfl2 - works with x64
the problem is, that with DMD 2.069.0, VS201
Hello,
I read in std.range that given a random access range r ,
r.opIndex(n) should return a reference to the nth element. Is
there a qualifier for a "read only" random access range? If not,
why?
I also don't really get the point of "Mobile Elements", how is
"destructively reading" related to