On 07/04/10 22:19, bearophile wrote:
Those mangled ids are ugly. It's much better to show programmers more readable
names in error messages. This can even become a bug report.
These errors are being given by the linker, and the linker doesn't know
how to demangle D symbols, so it doesn't. If
Ellery Newcomer Wrote:
>
> s/interface I{}/interface I{ char[] toString(); }/
> s/writefln(two_i)/writefln("%s",two_i)/
>
> ?
no :(
>
> or see bug 535
voted ++
Ali Ãehreli:
> > test.o:(.rodata+0x98): undefined reference to
> > `_D5dregs3avg12avg_weighted6opCallMFKAS5dregs10reputation6ratingKAdKAdZv'
> > test.o:(.rodata+0xf8): undefined reference to
>
> I wonder how you missed the "opCall" in there! :p
Those mangled ids are ugly. It's much better to
Ali Ãehreli:
> > avg_weighted(ratings,reputation_user,reputation_object);
And I have missed this is my cleaning of the code :-)
Bye,
bearophile
Few notes:
- opCall() of AvgWeighted was abstract.
- keep in mind that in D classes are CamelCase;
- variable names are written like weightSum (but once in a while a underscore
doesn't kill).
- Be careful because ref arguments are tricky.
- There is a line like foreach (r; reputationUser) r = 1; t
Joseph Wakeling wrote:
> void opCall(ref rating[] ratings,
> ref double[] reputation_user,
> ref double[] reputation_object);
The errors are for the missing definitions of that function. Either
provide a definition, or just remove that declaration
Hello everyone,
A probably stupid but I-can't-find-the-solution-with-Google problem.
I'm trying to compile a small project I'm working on to learn D, called
'dregs'. It's just 3 files for now (2 modules plus a little test program).
Unfortunately every time I try and compile, I get 'undefined ref
On 04/07/2010 06:13 AM, strtr wrote:
Is it possible to have this output [null,"1"] in stead of Error: std.format
formatArg?
interface I{}
class C:I{
int index;
char[] toString(){ return toString(index) }
}
I[2] two_i;
I[1] = new C();
writefln(two_i);
Would be handy for debugging ;)
s/int
Is it possible to have this output [null,"1"] in stead of Error: std.format
formatArg?
interface I{}
class C:I{
int index;
char[] toString(){ return toString(index) }
}
I[2] two_i;
I[1] = new C();
writefln(two_i);
Would be handy for debugging ;)
On Wed, 07 Apr 2010 03:05:34 -0400, Simen kjaeraas
wrote:
Yao G. wrote:
Hello.
Greetings.
foo( "Hello World", first, second );
---
You can notice that the first argument is a string literal. What I want
to know is: If a function argument is declared as a string literal, it
can be
You have to take a look at what the compiler does normally. It doesn't do magic.
Generally a function is something that takes a run-time value with a simple
protocol. So when an argument is inside a function, it's a variable, even if
the function was called with a constant.
Walter actually trie
Yao G. wrote:
Hello.
Greetings.
foo( "Hello World", first, second );
---
You can notice that the first argument is a string literal. What I want
to know is: If a function argument is declared as a string literal, it
can be accessed at compile time? And if the answer is yes, how can I d
On Tue, 06 Apr 2010 23:35:01 -0400, strtr wrote:
>
> Justin Spahr-Summers Wrote:
> >
> > Hmm, that is pretty weird. Are you doing any casts anywhere, or any
> > pointer arithmetic/tricks?
> A search for cast didn't show any related casts.
> Do you maybe know another thing to check?
> I do thro
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