Report a bug
If you spot a problem with this page, click here to create a Bugzilla issue.
Improve this page
Quickly fork, edit online, and submit a pull request for this page. Requires a signed-in GitHub account. This works well for small changes. If you'd like to make larger changes you may want to consider using a local clone.

dmd.nspace

A scoped C++ namespace symbol
D supports the following syntax to declare symbol(s) as being part of a C++ namespace:
extern (C++, "myNamespace") { /+ Symbols +/ }       // String variant
extern (C++, SomeNamespace) { /+ Other symbols +/ } // Identifier variant
The first form is an attribute and only affects mangling, and is implemented in dmd.attrib. The second form introduces a named scope and allows symbols to be refered to with or without the namespace name, much like a named template mixin, and is implemented in this module.
extern (C++, Basket)
{
    struct StrawBerry;
    void swapFood (Strawberry* f1, Strawberry* f2);
}
void main ()
{
    Basket.StrawBerry fruit1;
    StrawBerry fruit2;
    Basket.swapFood(fruit1, fruit2);
    swapFood(fruit1, fruit2);
}
Hence the Nspace symbol implements the usual ScopeDsymbol semantics.
Note that it implies extern(C++) so it cannot be used as a generic named scope. Additionally, Nspace with the same Identifier can be defined in different module (as C++ allows a namespace to be spread accross translation units), but symbols in it should be considered part of the same scope. Lastly, not all possible C++ namespace names are valid D identifier.
Authors:

Source nspace.d

class Nspace: dmd.dsymbol.ScopeDsymbol;
Ditto
Expression identExp;
Namespace identifier resolved during semantic.