July 09, 2004 Re: D compilers compatibility | ||||
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Posted in reply to Walter | In article <cbkapi$8nj$1@digitaldaemon.com>, Walter says... >"Arcane Jill" <Arcane_member@pathlink.com> wrote: >> One thing I would ask, as it's important in things like localization - can you give us a way to get at the nth, rather than next, parameter. For instance, something like: >> >> # printf("a = %2, b = %1\n", b, a); >> >> would print the right values in the right order. > >Can you give an example where this would be necessary? I'm joining in this thread very late, but I've not seen an answer to Walter's question, but Jill raises a valid issue. In an English message, you would need words in the order <adjective> <noun>. In French, amongst other languages, you would need words in the order <noun> <adjective>. red fox renard rouge If you had messages in a file, and read different files for different languages, but the formatting code was the same for all, then you'd benefit from having the English message containing: The %1$s %2$s is coming. And the French message containing: Le %2$s %1$s arrivant. (Apologies for the butchered French, lack of accents, and probable problems with gender - but it is a motivational example, not a production system. A better example would use two nouns - the subject and object of a sentence - where in one language, the best phrase needed the subject to come before the object and another language needed the reverse order. One of the systems I work on has a feature request for that, but the second language is Korean and I don't know enough Korean to give you a semi-decent example.) In C, the calling code might be: snprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), fmtstr, adj, noun); Where buffer is where the output is placed, fmtstr was read from a file and contained the %n$s notations, and adj and noun are variables containing the adjective and noun. The D notation would be somewhat different - someone better versed in the ways to do it should define that for me. The POSIX standard for sprintf() et al supports the n$ notation that I used. See: http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/fprintf.html At the very least, this gives a standardized precedent. Jonathan Leffler #include <disclaimer.h> Email: jleffler@earthlink.net, jleffler@us.ibm.com Guardian of DBD::Informix v2003.04 -- http://dbi.perl.org/ |
September 18, 2006 Re: D compilers compatibility | ||||
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Posted in reply to Alex Besogonov | can you plz help me doing a program using a TERMINATE STAY RESIDENT(TSR).... just only simple program were doing just only indicate our name in the 4 corner of our monitor while we enter the invalid letter or any keyboard that we press..... plz help me plz we need to submit it next week........ TNX 4 reading my message wish and pray that you can help me doing this program........BYE tnx.......... by the way im RYAN LIM frm BAUANG, LA UNION a 4th YEAR colleges taking up a computer engineering........wish you can help me doing this TSR bye wish you reply as soon as possible if you can.......we use a dos program a MASM or TASM.... |
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