On 08/27/2019 10:17 PM, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
> I can't do (a, b, c,d) = func1(i) directly.
> What do I do to assign the output of func1 to the individual variables?
I had some time to play with the following syntax, similar usage of
which has been proposed a number of times as a replacement for
On Sunday, 1 September 2019 at 20:50:42 UTC, Paul Backus wrote:
On Sunday, 1 September 2019 at 20:42:28 UTC, Jabari Zakiya
wrote:
It still won't compile, with this error.
Error: AliasSeq!(modpg, res_0, restwins, resinvrs) is not an
lvalue and cannot be modified
Here's a gist of the code.
To
On Sunday, 1 September 2019 at 20:42:28 UTC, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
It still won't compile, with this error.
Error: AliasSeq!(modpg, res_0, restwins, resinvrs) is not an
lvalue and cannot be modified
Here's a gist of the code.
Top functions in code with issues are genPgParameters and
selectPG
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 at 10:58:47 UTC, Simen Kjærås wrote:
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 at 10:39:44 UTC, Jabari Zakiya
wrote:
[...]
Great - then you can use shared(immutable(uint)[]). You should
be able to convert from immutable(uint[]) to that without
issue. There's a utility function
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 at 10:39:44 UTC, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
The values modpg, res_0, restwins, and resinvrs are constant
(immutable) values that are generated at run time. They are
global/shared and used inside threads.
So this process is initializing them at the start of the
program, b
On Thursday, 29 August 2019 at 09:04:17 UTC, Simen Kjærås wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 13:11:46 UTC, Jabari Zakiya
wrote:
[...]
Reduced example:
unittest {
int[] a;
// cannot implicitly convert expression a of type int[] to
shared(int[])
shared int[] b = a;
}
This is
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 13:11:46 UTC, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
When I do this:
uint a; uint b; uint[] c; uint[] d;
AliasSeq!(a, b, c, d) = genPGparameters(pg);
modpg= a;
res_0= b;
restwins = c;
resinvrs = d;
the compiler (ldc2 1.17) says:
D Projects ~/D/bin/ldc2 --release
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 10:10:08 UTC, Simen Kjærås wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 05:17:28 UTC, Jabari Zakiya
wrote:
Inside func2 I create an input value for func1 and then assign
func1's 4 outputs to named variable. That's where the problems
arise. func1 does some math based on
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 05:17:28 UTC, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
Inside func2 I create an input value for func1 and then assign
func1's 4 outputs to named variable. That's where the problems
arise. func1 does some math based on the input and generates 4
outputs.
I can't do (a, b, c,d) = fun
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 05:17:28 UTC, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 04:39:23 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 04:19:49 UTC, Jabari Zakiya
wrote:
I have a function (say func1) that takes 1 input value (an
integer number) and outputs 4 values
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 04:39:23 UTC, Mike Parker wrote:
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 04:19:49 UTC, Jabari Zakiya
wrote:
I have a function (say func1) that takes 1 input value (an
integer number) and outputs 4 values (2 integers and 2 arrays
of integers).
Then inside another functi
On Wednesday, 28 August 2019 at 04:19:49 UTC, Jabari Zakiya wrote:
I have a function (say func1) that takes 1 input value (an
integer number) and outputs 4 values (2 integers and 2 arrays
of integers).
Then inside another function (say func2) I provide the 1 input
to func1 and then want to as
I have a function (say func1) that takes 1 input value (an
integer number) and outputs 4 values (2 integers and 2 arrays of
integers).
Then inside another function (say func2) I provide the 1 input to
func1 and then want to assign its 4 output values to their
appropriate final variables that
13 matches
Mail list logo