Difference between revisions of "Tutorials"
(→How To) |
(→How To) |
||
Line 42: | Line 42: | ||
* [[Instantiating Class Objects Elsewhere Than the GC Heap]] | * [[Instantiating Class Objects Elsewhere Than the GC Heap]] | ||
* [[Timing Code]] | * [[Timing Code]] | ||
− | * [ | + | * [[Using UTF on Windows]] |
* [http://digitalmars.com/techtips/unittests.html Extending Unit Tests] | * [http://digitalmars.com/techtips/unittests.html Extending Unit Tests] | ||
* [http://digitalmars.com/techtips/command_prompt.html Running DMD From The Command Prompt] | * [http://digitalmars.com/techtips/command_prompt.html Running DMD From The Command Prompt] |
Revision as of 09:34, 24 February 2014
Best Practices
- Order of import statements
- Portability and performance
- Conventional module name for importing all modules in a package
Common Idioms
Although D inherited much of its syntax from C and C++, the new features that it introduces lead to some common idioms that are unique to D.
- Initializing variables
- Declaring constants
- Looping over integers
- Unittest placement
- Commenting out code
- Declaring dense multidimensional arrays
- Voldemort types
How To
- Bind D to C
- Compile and link with DMD on Windows
- Link with the Unilink linker on Windows instead of Optlink
- Convert header files with SED
- Define custom print format specifiers
- Function literals
- Implicitly convert a user-defined type to a builtin type
- Output locale character (MBS) to console
- printf
- Promote D Projects
- Regular expressions
- Runtime type information (RTTI)
- Run D in a CGI (web) environment
- Tame OPTLINK
- Run unit tests
- Using NASM with D
- Split file into multidimensional dynamic string array
- D for Win32
- Porting 32 Bit Code to 64 Bits
- Converting C .h Files to D Modules
- Instantiating Class Objects Elsewhere Than the GC Heap
- Timing Code
- Using UTF on Windows
- Extending Unit Tests
- Running DMD From The Command Prompt