diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'd.html.markdown')
| -rw-r--r-- | d.html.markdown | 32 | 
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 15 deletions
| diff --git a/d.html.markdown b/d.html.markdown index 80c1dc65..6f88cf84 100644 --- a/d.html.markdown +++ b/d.html.markdown @@ -53,15 +53,15 @@ void main() {      // For and while are nice, but in D-land we prefer 'foreach' loops.      // The '..' creates a continuous range, including the first value      // but excluding the last. -    foreach(i; 1..1_000_000) { +    foreach(n; 1..1_000_000) {          if(n % 2 == 0) -            writeln(i); +            writeln(n);      }      // There's also 'foreach_reverse' when you want to loop backwards. -    foreach_reverse(i; 1..int.max) { +    foreach_reverse(n; 1..int.max) {          if(n % 2 == 1) { -            writeln(i); +            writeln(n);          } else {              writeln("No!");          } @@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ void main() {  ```  We can define new types with `struct`, `class`, `union`, and `enum`. Structs and unions -are passed to functions by value (i.e. copied) and classes are passed by reference. Futhermore, +are passed to functions by value (i.e. copied) and classes are passed by reference. Furthermore,  we can use templates to parameterize all of these on both types and values!  ```c @@ -199,8 +199,8 @@ our getter and setter methods, and keep the clean syntax of  accessing members directly!  Other object-oriented goodies at our disposal -include `interface`s, `abstract class`es, -and `override`ing methods. D does inheritance just like Java: +include interfaces, abstract classes, +and overriding methods. D does inheritance just like Java:  Extend one class, implement as many interfaces as you please.  We've seen D's OOP facilities, but let's switch gears. D offers @@ -218,7 +218,7 @@ void main() {      // from 1 to 100. Easy!      // Just pass lambda expressions as template parameters! -    // You can pass any old function you like, but lambdas are convenient here. +    // You can pass any function you like, but lambdas are convenient here.      auto num = iota(1, 101).filter!(x => x % 2 == 0)                             .map!(y => y ^^ 2)                             .reduce!((a, b) => a + b); @@ -228,7 +228,7 @@ void main() {  ```  Notice how we got to build a nice Haskellian pipeline to compute num? -That's thanks to a D innovation know as Uniform Function Call Syntax. +That's thanks to a D innovation know as Uniform Function Call Syntax (UFCS).  With UFCS, we can choose whether to write a function call as a method  or free function call! Walter wrote a nice article on this  [here.](http://www.drdobbs.com/cpp/uniform-function-call-syntax/232700394) @@ -238,21 +238,23 @@ is of some type A on any expression of type A as a method.  I like parallelism. Anyone else like parallelism? Sure you do. Let's do some!  ```c +// Let's say we want to populate a large array with the square root of all +// consecutive integers starting from 1 (up until the size of the array), and we +// want to do this concurrently taking advantage of as many cores as we have +// available. +  import std.stdio;  import std.parallelism : parallel;  import std.math : sqrt;  void main() { -    // We want take the square root every number in our array, -    // and take advantage of as many cores as we have available. +    // Create your large array      auto arr = new double[1_000_000]; -    // Use an index, and an array element by referece, -    // and just call parallel on the array! +    // Use an index, access every array element by reference (because we're +    // going to change each element) and just call parallel on the array!      foreach(i, ref elem; parallel(arr)) {          ref = sqrt(i + 1.0);      }  } - -  ``` | 
