On Tuesday, 18 June 2019 at 09:17:09 UTC, Bart wrote:
I'm new to component based programming. I've read it is an
alternative to oop for speed.
Component based modelling is part of the OO-modelling toolbox.
Also, it isn't new, e.g. database-oriented modelling techniques
often use the same
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 09:22:28PM +, Aurélien Plazzotta via
Digitalmars-d-learn wrote:
> On Tuesday, 18 June 2019 at 09:17:09 UTC, Bart wrote:
>
> > Can someone help me understand this a little better and how I'd go
> > about using it in D? Specifically I'm looking at the pros and cons,
> >
On Tuesday, 18 June 2019 at 09:17:09 UTC, Bart wrote:
Can someone help me understand this a little better and how I'd
go about using it in D? Specifically I'm looking at the pros
and cons, what are the real similarities and differences to
oop, and how one implements them in D(taking in to
On Tuesday, 18 June 2019 at 09:17:09 UTC, Bart wrote:
I'm new to component based programming. I've read it is an
alternative to oop for speed. I don't understand how it is
possible to have an alternative to oop and still have oop like
behavior(polymorphism) nor how to do this. It seems all the
I guess design patterns are independent of implementation
language. Anyway, I suspect OO is incidental in components. D
probably can do it better than C++ at least. Do search for the
video of a talk Walter Bright gave on component programming in D.
I'm new to component based programming. I've read it is an
alternative to oop for speed. I don't understand how it is
possible to have an alternative to oop and still have oop like
behavior(polymorphism) nor how to do this. It seems all the great
things oop offers(all the design patterns)