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DCD 0.2.0 Released
Nov 13, 2013
Brian Schott
Nov 13, 2013
Jussi Jumppanen
Nov 14, 2013
Jacob Carlborg
Nov 14, 2013
Philippe Sigaud
Nov 14, 2013
Jacob Carlborg
Nov 14, 2013
Philippe Sigaud
Nov 14, 2013
Mathias Lang
Nov 15, 2013
simendsjo
Nov 15, 2013
Brian Schott
November 13, 2013
DCD 0.2.0 is released.

Github Project: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD
Release Tag: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/tree/0.2.0

The D Completion Daemon is an auto-complete system for the D programming language that is not tied to any specific text editor or IDE. Modules exist for Textadept, Vim, Kate, Emacs, and Zeus.

The 0.2.0 release closes 28 issues, which you can browse here: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/issues?milestone=2&state=closed. The highlights of this release are improved speed, reduced memory consumption, and the ability to get the location of the declaration of a symbol at the cursor location.

Notes:
* Only the Textadept module has support for go-to-declaration at the moment. Pull requests to update the other modules are welcome and encouraged.

* Lua's io.popen is still a pain on Windows. It causes a command window to pop up when getting completions. I'll need to figure out a way around that for 0.3.0.
November 13, 2013
On Wednesday, 13 November 2013 at 19:40:08 UTC, Brian Schott wrote:

> * Only the Textadept module has support for go-to-declaration at the moment.

FYI, the dcd_lookup.py Python script found on this page:

http://www.zeusedit.com/zforum/viewtopic.php?t=7020

implements the *go-to-declaration* feature for the Zeus IDE.
November 14, 2013
On 2013-11-13 20:40, Brian Schott wrote:
> DCD 0.2.0 is released.
>
> Github Project: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD
> Release Tag: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/tree/0.2.0
>
> The D Completion Daemon is an auto-complete system for the D programming
> language that is not tied to any specific text editor or IDE. Modules
> exist for Textadept, Vim, Kate, Emacs, and Zeus.
>
> The 0.2.0 release closes 28 issues, which you can browse here:
> https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/issues?milestone=2&state=closed. The
> highlights of this release are improved speed, reduced memory
> consumption, and the ability to get the location of the declaration of a
> symbol at the cursor location.
>
> Notes:
> * Only the Textadept module has support for go-to-declaration at the
> moment. Pull requests to update the other modules are welcome and
> encouraged.
>
> * Lua's io.popen is still a pain on Windows. It causes a command window
> to pop up when getting completions. I'll need to figure out a way around
> that for 0.3.0.

Awesome, keep up the good work.

-- 
/Jacob Carlborg
November 14, 2013
This project imports stdx.d.(lexer/parser/ast). Where can I find these modules?

On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 8:19 AM, Jacob Carlborg <doob@me.com> wrote:
> On 2013-11-13 20:40, Brian Schott wrote:
>>
>> DCD 0.2.0 is released.
>>
>> Github Project: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD
>> Release Tag: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/tree/0.2.0
>>
>> The D Completion Daemon is an auto-complete system for the D programming language that is not tied to any specific text editor or IDE. Modules exist for Textadept, Vim, Kate, Emacs, and Zeus.
>>
>> The 0.2.0 release closes 28 issues, which you can browse here: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/issues?milestone=2&state=closed. The highlights of this release are improved speed, reduced memory consumption, and the ability to get the location of the declaration of a symbol at the cursor location.
>>
>> Notes:
>> * Only the Textadept module has support for go-to-declaration at the
>> moment. Pull requests to update the other modules are welcome and
>> encouraged.
>>
>> * Lua's io.popen is still a pain on Windows. It causes a command window to pop up when getting completions. I'll need to figure out a way around that for 0.3.0.
>
>
> Awesome, keep up the good work.
>
> --
> /Jacob Carlborg
November 14, 2013
On 2013-11-14 08:36, Philippe Sigaud wrote:
> This project imports stdx.d.(lexer/parser/ast). Where can I find these modules?

The Dscanner submodule:

https://github.com/Hackerpilot/Dscanner/tree/master/stdx/d

-- 
/Jacob Carlborg
November 14, 2013
A completion feature for emacs, I definitely need to try it ! Thanks for your work Brian.

@Philippe Sigaud: On the author's other project, DScanner (
https://github.com/Hackerpilot/Dscanner).



2013/11/14 Philippe Sigaud <philippe.sigaud@gmail.com>

> This project imports stdx.d.(lexer/parser/ast). Where can I find these
> modules?
>
> On Thu, Nov 14, 2013 at 8:19 AM, Jacob Carlborg <doob@me.com> wrote:
> > On 2013-11-13 20:40, Brian Schott wrote:
> >>
> >> DCD 0.2.0 is released.
> >>
> >> Github Project: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD
> >> Release Tag: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/tree/0.2.0
> >>
> >> The D Completion Daemon is an auto-complete system for the D programming language that is not tied to any specific text editor or IDE. Modules exist for Textadept, Vim, Kate, Emacs, and Zeus.
> >>
> >> The 0.2.0 release closes 28 issues, which you can browse here: https://github.com/Hackerpilot/DCD/issues?milestone=2&state=closed. The highlights of this release are improved speed, reduced memory consumption, and the ability to get the location of the declaration of a symbol at the cursor location.
> >>
> >> Notes:
> >> * Only the Textadept module has support for go-to-declaration at the
> >> moment. Pull requests to update the other modules are welcome and
> >> encouraged.
> >>
> >> * Lua's io.popen is still a pain on Windows. It causes a command window to pop up when getting completions. I'll need to figure out a way around that for 0.3.0.
> >
> >
> > Awesome, keep up the good work.
> >
> > --
> > /Jacob Carlborg
>


November 14, 2013
Thanks Mathias and Jacob!
November 15, 2013
Hi, I noticed the vim setup requires Vundle, whereas I know a lot of folks use pathogen to manage their vim plugins.

is there any particular reason for Vundle over pathogen? Can the two co-exist together?

thanks
November 15, 2013
On Friday, 15 November 2013 at 23:25:31 UTC, Jacek Furmankiewicz wrote:
> Hi, I noticed the vim setup requires Vundle, whereas I know a lot of folks use pathogen to manage their vim plugins.
>
> is there any particular reason for Vundle over pathogen? Can the two co-exist together?
>
> thanks

I installed it with pathogen just fine. Just manually create a symlink.
November 15, 2013
Thanks.

Maybe it would be worth adding a pathogen section to the docs to show how to set it up besides Vundle.
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