If you haven't read this article on std.datetime yet, then you probably should, as it will probably answer most basic questions that you have for how to use it.
But in general, core.time.Duration is what you should be using for adding and subtracting units from any of the time point types in std.datetime (SysTime, DateTime, Date, or TimeOfDay). So, you get code like
auto date = Date(2012, 12, 21);
date += dur!"days"(50);
or
auto date = Date(2012, 12, 21);
date += days(50);
(The templated dur function is the generic way to generate a Duration, but it has aliases for each of the units that it supports, so stuff like seconds(5) or 22.minutes() will work as well).
The add function exists for "months" and "years", because a Duration can't hold months or years (because you can't convert between them and smaller units without a specific date), and there needs to be a way to add months or years to a time point. Also, there's the question of what to do when you add or subtract a month or year to/from a date, and the month that it moves to doesn't include that day, so add accepts AllowDayOverflow in order to control that (which wouldn't be necessary with smaller units).
auto d3 = Date(2000, 2, 29);
d3.add!"years"(1);
assert(d3 == Date(2001, 3, 1));
auto d4 = Date(2000, 2, 29);
d4.add!"years"(1, AllowDayOverflow.no);
assert(d4 == Date(2001, 2, 28));
But add doesn't accept any other units, because you can simply use the normal arithmetic operations with a Duration. Also, subtracting two time points will result in a Duration.
assert(Date(2012, 12, 5) - Date(2002, 11, 17) == dur!"days"(3671));
assert(Date(2012, 12, 5) - dur!"days"(3671) == Date(2002, 11, 17));
Unlike add, roll accepts all of the units in the type rather than just "months" and "years", but that's because it's doing a different operation from +, and so adding or subtracting a Duration won't work (as that already adds or subtracts). Rather roll adds to a specific unit without adding to the others.
auto d = Date(2010, 1, 1);
d.roll!"days"(33);
assert(d == Date(2010, 1, 3));