Compilers
DMD »Digital Mars D compiler |
GDC »GCC D compiler |
LDC »LLVM D compiler |
Also see: Experimental compilers
Which compiler should I use?
If you're a beginner DMD is the recommended choice, as it is the implementation closest to the D Language Specification. Otherwise it depends on what you need, what platforms you intend to develop for, and your personal preferences. GDC and LDC both generate substantially faster binaries than DMD.
Comparison
DMD | GDC | LDC | |
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Architectures |
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Distribution |
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Backend | DMD (DMC fork) | GCC | LLVM |
License | Frontend: GPL 1 or later / Artistic License
Backend: custom |
GPL 3 or later | LDC-specific code: 3-clause BSD |
Inline assembler | Yes, x86 | Yes, GCC-style only (all targets) | Yes, D-style (x86) and GCC-style (all targets) |
SIMD | Partial (?) | Partial (?) | Partial (?) |
Phobos as a shared library |
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Building D code as shared library |
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Dynamic loading of D shared libraries |
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Linux specific | |||
Object file format | ELF | ELF | ELF |
Mac specific | |||
Object file format | Mach-O | Mach-O | Mach-O |
Windows specific | |||
Object file format | OMF (32) / COFF (64) | COFF | COFF |
Package and/or binary availability, by platform and compiler
Version number is given in brackets. Many of the manual download links have 10s of versions available, only the most recent few are listed here.
Some unofficial repositories and downloads are listed here, but of course many more do exist. With a little searching, you may be able to find something more up to date for your chosen OS.
Very old compilers are (mostly) omitted, as they are unlikely to be of interest to users.
Platform |
Compiler | ||
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DMD | GDC | LDC | |
Windows |
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OS X |
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Linux (generic) |
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Cross-platform |
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Distribution-specific packages | |||
Debian |
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Ubuntu |
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Fedora |
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OpenSuse |
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CentOS |
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Arch Linux |
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Gentoo | see https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Dlang | ||
FreeBSD |
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