On 12 May 2013 15:41, Rel <relm...@rambler.ru> wrote: > Benjamin Thaut, yes I know. but here is an example, if I add a class to > the code like that: > > > module main; > > extern (C) void* _Dmodule_ref = null; > extern (C) void printf(const char*, ...); > > extern (C) void puts(const char*); > extern (C) void exit(int); > > class A { > int a = 100; > int b = 200; > > }; > > extern (C) void main() { > scope(exit) { > puts("Exiting!"); > exit(0); > } > > A a; printf("%d %d\n", a.a, a.b); > } > > I would get a lot of undefined symbols like '_D14TypeInfo_Class6__vtblZ', > '_**D6object6Object8toStringMFZAya**', '_D6object6Object6toHashMFZk' and > etc. I don't really need any runtime type information, is there a way to > make a compiler not generating typeinfos ('-fno-rtti' doesn't work)? >
If you want to use classes, there must *always* be an Object class defined somewhere to link to. All classes derive from Object. -- Iain Buclaw *(p < e ? p++ : p) = (c & 0x0f) + '0';