It is still a bit rough around some edges, particularly with regard to multi-threading and operator overloading, and there are some documentation bits missing, but it should be fine for basic use. The test-suite should build and run fine with the current versions of DMD, LDC and Tango (at least) on Linux x86_64 and Mac OS X 10.6. git-svn-id: https://swig.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/swig/trunk@12299 626c5289-ae23-0410-ae9c-e8d60b6d4f22
23 lines
787 B
D
23 lines
787 B
D
/* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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* This file was automatically generated by SWIG (http://www.swig.org).
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* Version 1.3.41
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*
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* Do not make changes to this file unless you know what you are doing--modify
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* the SWIG interface file instead.
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* ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- */
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module example;
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static import example_wrap;
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static import tango.stdc.stringz;
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public const int ICONST = 42;
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public const double FCONST = 2.1828;
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public const char CCONST = 'x';
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public const char CCONST2 = '\n';
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public const char[] SCONST = "Hello World";
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public const char[] SCONST2 = "\"Hello World\"";
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public const double EXPR = 42+3*(2.1828);
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public const int iconst = 37;
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public const double fconst = 3.14;
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