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November 30, 2004 Need hel pgetting started wtih D =) | ||||
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I just found out about D recently and I have a few questions. 1- Where can I get the latest version of a decent IDE for D? 2- How fast is D compared to the other languages around (although I'm no speed freak, I'm just curious)? 3- How fast is developing for D? For someone who has programmed with C and C++ before, the learning curve should be fairly small right? Thanks =) |
November 30, 2004 Re: Need hel pgetting started wtih D =) | ||||
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Posted in reply to Sion | In article <coin59$2let$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Sion says... > >I just found out about D recently and I have a few questions. > >1- Where can I get the latest version of a decent IDE for D? There really isn't one, though there is syntax hilighting for quite a few editors. See http://www.prowiki.org/wiki4d/wiki.cgi?FrontPage >2- How fast is D compared to the other languages around (although I'm no speed freak, I'm just curious)? D is (or can be) as fast as C/C++. There are a few spots that could use tuning, but this is lower priority than compiler bugfixes and the like. >3- How fast is developing for D? As an experienced C++ programmer, I find that I can code a bit faster in D than in C++. The syntax is cleaner and less prone to programmer error (IMO). >For someone who has programmed with C and C++ before, the learning curve should be fairly small right? Yes. Sean |
November 30, 2004 Re: Need hel pgetting started wtih D =) | ||||
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Posted in reply to Sion | In article <coin59$2let$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Sion says... > >I just found out about D recently and I have a few questions. > >1- Where can I get the latest version of a decent IDE for D? Don't yet use one for D, sorry. >2- How fast is D compared to the other languages around (although I'm no speed freak, I'm just curious)? Pretty much anything you can do with C/C++ with regards to memory management and such you can do with D. There are some parts of the language that present better opportunites to the compiler (like foreach, import, first-class arrays, built-in strings and associative arrays, etc.). D might well end up faster for many things after several months (as opposed to several years for C++) of compiler development ;) >3- How fast is developing for D? > >For someone who has programmed with C and C++ before, the learning curve should be fairly small right? My background sounds similiar, and I started with D in August. I use C++ as neccessary for work but think I'm more comfortable with D right now than C++ - often when I need to prototype something I'll do that in D and then it's "..ok, done with that - back to the grind". The DMD compiler is generally very fast and easy to use. > >Thanks =) > > |
November 30, 2004 Re: Need hel pgetting started wtih D =) | ||||
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Posted in reply to Sean Kelly | "Sean Kelly" <sean@f4.ca> wrote in message news:coio6l$2mse$1@digitaldaemon.com... > In article <coin59$2let$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Sion says... > >2- How fast is D compared to the other languages around (although I'm no speed > >freak, I'm just curious)? > > D is (or can be) as fast as C/C++. There are a few spots that could use tuning, > but this is lower priority than compiler bugfixes and the like. D can actually be considerably faster. See www.digitalmars.com/d/cppstrings.html |
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