October 08, 2011 Pointers and Ranges | ||||
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I'm new to ranges and while I understand the basic concept, I don't know everything about them. With arrays, you can simply use arr.ptr to infer a type automatically. So I was wondering, is there an equivalent for ranges? What I'm looking for is the ability to do *p as well as p[1] or p[-1] with ranges. |
October 08, 2011 Re: Pointers and Ranges | ||||
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Posted in reply to Xinok | On Sat, 08 Oct 2011 12:31:20 -0400, Xinok wrote: > I'm new to ranges and while I understand the basic concept, I don't know everything about them. With arrays, you can simply use arr.ptr to infer a type automatically. Or with ElementType. If Range is a template type: writefln("I have a range of %ss", (ElementType!Range).stringof); // for example, "I have a range of ints" > So I was wondering, is there an equivalent for > ranges? What I'm looking for is the ability to do *p Depending on the range it can be - myRange.front - myRange.back - myRange[i] > as well as p[1] or Only with RandomAccessRanges. > p[-1] with ranges. That should be considered out of bounds with ranges, but it is possible to achieve with opIndex() for RandomAccessRanges. Ali P.S. I am in the process of translating my Turkish D book to English. Since it targets the beginner programmer and starts from the very basics, it may be a little boring for some. But I had decided to skip some chapters and start translating more interesting ones that normally come later in the book. The two chapters on Ranges happen to be the ones that I am currently working on. I may make the current state of the translation available in a few days. Here are the originals: http://ddili.org/ders/d/araliklar.html http://ddili.org/ders/d/araliklar_baska.html There is a Google translate bar on the left hand side with very limited results. (Humans are still better than computers! :)) Here is a little ForwardRange example: import std.stdio; import std.range; struct FibonacciSeries { int first = 0; int second = 1; static enum empty = false; // Alternatively: static immutable bool empty = false; @property int front() const { return first; } void popFront() { int third = first + second; first = second; second = third; } FibonacciSeries save() const { return this; } } void main() { writeln(take(FibonacciSeries(), 10)); } |
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