So I've been looking at D for about 15 mins, so it's no wonder I have questions, but something strange is happening for me.
I installed D from here and Visual D from here and I'm running everything in Visual Studio 2010 Professional. D examples compile and run and the debugger appears to be working fine.
While going through dsource.org's fundamental tutorials, I was reading the Wait section when I noticed that if you use writef
instead of writefln
then the last line of the output prints after the pause.
Here's the example's code:
import std.c.stdio; /* for getch() */
import std.process; /* for system() */
import std.stdio; /* for writefln */
void main() {
writefln("Press a key (using 'std.c.stdio.getch();' to wait) . . .");
getch();
writefln("Waiting again\n(using 'system(\"pause\");'):");
system("pause");
}
And here's mine, note the only change is writefln
to writef
import std.c.stdio; /* for getch() */
import std.process; /* for system() */
import std.stdio; /* for writefln */
void main() {
writef("Press a key (using 'std.c.stdio.getch();' to wait) . . .");
getch();
writef("Waiting again\n(using 'system(\"pause\");'):");
system("pause");
}
With writef
the program will display nothing on the screen, pause at getch
, then when I press a key I see the prompt:
Press a key (using 'std.c.stdio.getch();' to wait) . . .Waiting again
Press any key to continue . . .
but NOT "(using 'system("pause");'):". The parenthetic statement appears after I press a key to get through the 'pause' command in the console. If I use writefln
it prints, waits, prints both lines, then waits again as you'd expect.
What explains this behavior?