Difference between revisions of "How You Can Help"

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* We need [http://wiki.dlang.org/Coming_From D as a second language] sections completed - C and C++ need updating - we need more examples of how to shift idiom to speak fluent D; the Python page is started but needs fleshing out; and most of the other sections are empty.
 
* We need [http://wiki.dlang.org/Coming_From D as a second language] sections completed - C and C++ need updating - we need more examples of how to shift idiom to speak fluent D; the Python page is started but needs fleshing out; and most of the other sections are empty.
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Andrei: "One note about Walter's older C/C++ transition articles. They have good information on transition technicalities (e.g. "how do I do this thing in D that I used to do in C++?") but not a lot about the changes in coding style - making object copying not arbitrarily expensive, choosing struct vs. class, preferring pipelines and lazy to eager computation, etc. From what I see some folks come from C++, write their first D program in a stilted C++ idiom, and are left with the impression that the work is not worth the trouble."

Revision as of 10:44, 31 March 2015

How you can help with D


Documentation


  • std.algorithm - see forum

Wiki


  • We need D as a second language sections completed - C and C++ need updating - we need more examples of how to shift idiom to speak fluent D; the Python page is started but needs fleshing out; and most of the other sections are empty.

Andrei: "One note about Walter's older C/C++ transition articles. They have good information on transition technicalities (e.g. "how do I do this thing in D that I used to do in C++?") but not a lot about the changes in coding style - making object copying not arbitrarily expensive, choosing struct vs. class, preferring pipelines and lazy to eager computation, etc. From what I see some folks come from C++, write their first D program in a stilted C++ idiom, and are left with the impression that the work is not worth the trouble."