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January 03, 2008 compile time printf -> .NET style format string conversion template. | ||||
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Alright the basic idea behind this was: - During tango porting i want all the stdlib wrapping done in 1 module. - Any function that takes a format string cant be wrapped transparently without converting the string or doing something half baked (right?). So i wrote this compile-time conversion template: http://paste.dprogramming.com/dpjq2ug6 (See the FMT template for discussion purposes. The rest is just conversion/parsing). Now for the questions: - Why cant i do return x ~ FMT!(s[i .. $]); at line 106? This would avoid having to call skip() to count the fmt string length a 2nd time. The compiler complains s[i .. $] is an invalid argument or somethig. - How do i template the print function so that the compiler retains the immediateness of the format string arg. with something like this you'd have to do: --------------------------- void print(T...)(T t) { version (Tango) Stdout.formatln(t); else writefln(t); } print(FMT!("whatever %d"), 0); where ideally you would want something like this: --------------------------- void print(T...)(char[] fmt, T t) { version (Tango) Stdout.formatln(FMT!(fmt), t); else writefln(fmt, t); } print("whatever %d", 0); |
January 03, 2008 Re: compile time printf -> .NET style format string conversion template. | ||||
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Posted in reply to Neal Alexander | Neal Alexander wrote:
> Alright the basic idea behind this was:
>
> - During tango porting i want all the stdlib wrapping done in 1 module.
> - Any function that takes a format string cant be wrapped transparently without converting the string or doing something half baked (right?).
>
> So i wrote this compile-time conversion template:
>
> http://paste.dprogramming.com/dpjq2ug6 (See the FMT template for discussion purposes. The rest is just conversion/parsing).
>
> Now for the questions:
>
> - Why cant i do return x ~ FMT!(s[i .. $]); at line 106? This would avoid having to call skip() to count the fmt string length a 2nd time. The compiler complains s[i .. $] is an invalid argument or somethig.
>
> - How do i template the print function so that the compiler retains the immediateness of the format string arg.
>
> with something like this you'd have to do:
> ---------------------------
> void print(T...)(T t)
> {
> version (Tango) Stdout.formatln(t);
> else writefln(t);
> }
> print(FMT!("whatever %d"), 0);
>
>
> where ideally you would want something like this:
> ---------------------------
> void print(T...)(char[] fmt, T t)
> {
> version (Tango) Stdout.formatln(FMT!(fmt), t);
> else writefln(fmt, t);
> }
> print("whatever %d", 0);
figured out one of the questions at least haha:
template print(char[] fmt, T...)
{
void print(){ Stdout.formatln(FMT!(fmt), T); }
}
print!(...);
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January 04, 2008 Re: compile time printf -> .NET style format string conversion template. | ||||
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Posted in reply to Neal Alexander Attachments: | Neal Alexander wrote:
In case you're interested, attached is my (command-line tool) attempt at doing the same thing: converting writef's formatting strings to Tango's. I soon gave up as doing a character-by-character exact conversion leads to too many special cases.
It's a couple months old and thus probably doesn't even compile with the current Tango. On top of that, the code is fairly ugly as I didn't expect it to blow up to such a length. But if you want to support everything writef parses (what I tried) there might be something of use in there.
--
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