The D programming language

Bibliographic Information

The D programming language

Andrei Alexandrescu ; [forewords by Walter Bright and Scott Meyers]

Addison-Wesley, c2010

  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 433-437) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

"To the best of my knowledge, D offers an unprecedentedly adroit integration of several powerful programming paradigms: imperative, object-oriented, functional, and meta." -From the Foreword by Walter Bright "This is a book by a skilled author describing an interesting programming language. I'm sure you'll find the read rewarding." -From the Foreword by Scott Meyers D is a programming language built to help programmers address the challenges of modern software development. It does so by fostering modules interconnected through precise interfaces, a federation of tightly integrated programming paradigms, language-enforced thread isolation, modular type safety, an efficient memory model, and more. The D Programming Language is an authoritative and comprehensive introduction to D. Reflecting the author's signature style, the writing is casual and conversational, but never at the expense of focus and pre cision. It covers all aspects of the language (such as expressions, statements, types, functions, contracts, and modules), but it is much more than an enumeration of features. Inside the book you will find In-depth explanations, with idiomatic examples, for all language features How feature groups support major programming paradigms Rationale and best-use advice for each major feature Discussion of cross-cutting issues, such as error handling, contract programming, and concurrency Tables, figures, and "cheat sheets" that serve as a handy quick reference for day-to-day problem solving with D Written for the working programmer, The D Programming Language not only introduces the D language-it presents a compendium of good practices and idioms to help both your coding with D and your coding in general.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Walter Bright xv Foreword by Scott Meyers xix Preface xxiii Chapter 1: "D"iving In 1 1.1 Numbers and Expressions 3 1.2 Statements 5 1.3 Function Basics 6 1.4 Arrays and Associative Arrays 7 1.5 Basic Data Structures 14 1.6 Interfaces and Classes 20 1.7 Values versus References 25 1.8 Summary 27 Chapter 2: Basic Types. Expressions 29 2.1 Symbols 30 2.2 Literals 32 2.3 Operators 42 2.4 Summary and Quick Reference 61 Chapter 3: Statements 65 3.1 The Expression Statement 65 3.2 The Compound Statement 66 3.3 The if Statement 67 3.4 The static if Statement 68 3.5 The switch Statement 71 3.6 The final switch Statement 72 3.7 Looping Statements 73 3.8 The goto Statement 78 3.9 The with Statement 80 3.10 The return Statement 81 3.11 The throw and try Statements 81 3.12 The mixin Statement 82 3.13 The scope Statement 84 3.14 The synchronized Statement 88 3.15 The asm Statement 89 3.16 Summary and Quick Reference 89 Chapter 4: Arrays, Associative Arrays, and Strings 93 4.1 Dynamic Arrays 93 4.2 Fixed-Size Arrays 107 4.3 Multidimensional Arrays 111 4.4 Associative Arrays 114 4.5 Strings 118 4.6 Arrays' Maverick Cousin: The Pointer 124 4.7 Summary and Quick Reference 126 Chapter 5: Data and Functions. Functional Style 131 5.1 Writing and unittesting a Simple Function 131 5.2 Passing Conventions and Storage Classes 134 5.3 Type Parameters 138 5.4 Signature Constraints 140 5.5 Overloading 142 5.6 Higher-Order Functions. Function Literals 148 5.7 Nested Functions 150 5.8 Closures 152 5.9 Beyond Arrays. Ranges. Pseudo Members 154 5.10 Variadic Functions 159 5.11 Function Attributes 165 5.12 Compile-Time Evaluation 169 Chapter 6: Classes. Object-Oriented Style 175 6.1 Classes 175 6.2 Object Names Are References 177 6.3 It's an Object's Life 181 6.4 Methods and Inheritance 190 6.5 Class-Level Encapsulation with static Members 196 6.6 Curbing Extensibility with final Methods 197 6.7 Encapsulation 199 6.8 One Root to Rule Them All 203 6.9 Interfaces 212 6.10 Abstract Classes 218 6.11 Nested Classes 222 6.12 Multiple Inheritance 226 6.13 Multiple Subtyping 230 6.14 Parameterized Classes and Interfaces 233 6.15 Summary 237 Chapter 7: Other User-Defined Types 239 7.1 structs 240 7.2 unions 270 7.3 Enumerated Values 272 7.4 alias 276 7.5 Parameterized Scopes with template 278 7.6 Injecting Code with mixin templates 282 7.7 Summary and Reference 285 Chapter 8: Type Qualifiers 287 8.1 The immutable Qualifier 288 8.2 Composing with immutable 291 8.3 immutable Parameters and Methods 292 8.4 immutable Constructors 293 8.5 Conversions involving immutable 295 8.6 The const Qualifier 297 8.7 Interaction between const and immutable 298 8.8 Propagating a Qualifier from Parameter to Result 299 8.9 Summary 300 Chapter 9: Error Handling 301 9.1 throwing and catching 301 9.2 Types 302 9.3 finally clauses 306 9.4 nothrow Functions and the Special Nature of Throwable 307 9.5 Collateral Exceptions 307 9.6 Stack Unwinding and Exception-Safe Code 309 9.7 Uncaught Exceptions 312 Chapter 10: Contract Programming 313 10.1 Contracts 314 10.2 Assertions 316 10.3 Preconditions 317 10.4 Postconditions 319 10.5 Invariants 321 10.6 Skipping Contract Checks. Release Builds 324 10.7 Contracts: Not for Scrubbing Input 327 10.8 Contracts and Inheritance 329 10.9 Contracts in Interfaces 334 Chapter 11: Scaling Up 337 11.1 Packages and Modules 337 11.2 Safety 353 11.3 Module Constructors and Destructors 356 11.4 Documentation Comments 358 11.5 Interfacing with C and C++ 359 11.6 deprecated 359 11.7 version Declarations 360 11.8 debug Declarations 361 11.9 D's Standard Library 361 Chapter 12: Operator Overloading 365 12.1 Overloading Operators 366 12.2 Overloading Unary Operators 367 12.3 Overloading Binary Operators 371 12.4 Overloading Comparison Operators 375 12.5 Overloading Assignment Operators 376 12.6 Overloading Indexing Operators 377 12.7 Overloading Slicing Operators 379 12.8 The $ Operator 379 12.9 Overloading foreach 380 12.10 Defining Overloaded Operators in Classes 383 12.11 And Now for Something Completely Different: opDispatch 384 12.12 Summary and Quick Reference 388 Chapter 13: Concurrency 391 13.1 Concurrentgate 392 13.2 A Brief History of Data Sharing 394 13.3 Look, Ma, No (Default) Sharing 397 13.4 Starting a Thread 399 13.5 Exchanging Messages between Threads 401 13.6 Pattern Matching with receive 403 13.7 File Copying-with a Twist 406 13.8 Thread Termination 407 13.9 Out-of-Band Communication 409 13.10 Mailbox Crowding 410 13.11 The shared Type Qualifier 411 13.12 Operations with shared Data and Their Effects 413 13.13 Lock-Based Synchronization with synchronized classes 414 13.14 Field Typing in synchronized classes 419 13.15 Deadlocks and the synchronized Statement 424 13.16 Lock-Free Coding with shared classes 426 13.17 Summary 431 Bibliography 433 Index 439

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