In my program, I have a class that I want to be allocated before entering main(). I'd like to tuck these away in a separate module to keep the clutter out of my code; However, as soon as the module goes out of scope (before main() is entered), the objects are deallocated, leaving me trying to use a null reference in main. A short example:
// main.d
import SceneData;
int main(string[] argv)
{
start.onSceneEnter();
readln();
return 0;
}
// SceneData.d
import Scene;
public
{
Scene start;
}
static this()
{
Scene start = new Scene("start", "test", "test";
}
// Scene.d
import std.stdio;
class Scene
{
public
{
this(string name)
{
this.name = name;
}
this(string name, string descriptionOnEnter, string descriptionOnConnect)
{
this.name = name;
this.descriptionOnEnter = descriptionOnEnter;
this.descriptionOnConnect = descriptionOnConnect;
}
void onSceneEnter()
{
writeln(name);
writeln(descriptionOnEnter);
}
}
private
{
string name;
string descriptionOnEnter;
string descriptionOnConnect;
}
}
I'm still getting used to the concept of modules being the basic unit of encapsulation, as opposed to the class in C++ and Java. Is this possible to do in D, or must I move my initializations to the main module?
Here:
static this()
{
Scene start = new Scene("start", "test", "test");
}
"start" is a local scope variable that shadows global one. Global one is not initialized. After I have changed this to:
static this()
{
start = new Scene("start", "test", "test");
}
Program crashed no more.