On Sun, Jul 15, 2012 at 4:33 PM, Henning Pohl <henning@still-hidden.de> wrote:
On Sunday, 15 July 2012 at 12:21:23 UTC, Gor Gyolchanyan wrote:
On Sun, Jul 15, 2012 at 4:05 PM, Henning Pohl <henning@still-hidden.de>wrote:

Most closed source C and C++ libraries provide headers and binaries. It
seems to me that there is no way to do this in D, because the source files
always have to be available to import their modules.

I'm not going to write something proprietary or closed source, but i
wonder if others can do so.


It's quite possible. All you have to do is make a module, which doesn't
contain any function bodies. The imported modules aren't compiled with the
code. Most of the time it's easier to have a single module to have both the
code to compile and symbols to import. In other cases they can be separated.

Okay, so it works just like in C:

// The "header" file
module lib;

void printHelloWorld();


// The "source" file
module lib
import std.stdio;

void printHelloWorld() {
     writeln("Hello world!");
}

Exactly. Not defining a function body is perfectly fine for precisely these reasons. And, just like in C, forgetting to link with the missing body will result in a linker error.

--
Bye,
Gor Gyolchanyan.