std.typecons.Nullable.opAssign  - multiple declarations
				Function Nullable.opAssign
Assigns value to the internally-held state. If the assignment
succeeds, this becomes non-null.
						
				void opAssign
				(
				
				  T value
				
				);
						
					
				Parameters
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| value | A value of type Tto assign to thisNullable. | 
Example
If this Nullable wraps a type that already has a null value
    (such as a pointer), then assigning the null value to this
    Nullable is no different than assigning any other value of
    type T, and the resulting code will look very strange. It
    is strongly recommended that this be avoided by instead using
    the version of Nullable that takes an additional nullValue
    template argument.
//Passes
Nullable!(int*) npi;
assert(npiFunction Nullable.opAssign
Assigns value to the internally-held state. If the assignment
succeeds, this becomes non-null. No null checks are made. Note
that the assignment may leave this in the null state.
						
				void opAssign
				(
				
				  T value
				
				);
						
					
				Parameters
| Name | Description | 
|---|---|
| value | A value of type Tto assign to thisNullable.
            If it isnullvalue, then the internal state of
            thisNullablewill be set to null. | 
Example
If this Nullable wraps a type that already has a null value
    (such as a pointer), and that null value is not given for
    nullValue, then assigning the null value to this Nullable
    is no different than assigning any other value of type T,
    and the resulting code will look very strange. It is strongly
    recommended that this be avoided by using T's "built in"
    null value for nullValue.
//Passes
enum nullVal = cast(int*) 0xCAFEBABE;
Nullable!(int*, nullVal) npi;
assert(npiAuthors
Andrei Alexandrescu, Bartosz Milewski, Don Clugston, Shin Fujishiro, Kenji Hara