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dmd.root.rmem

Compiler implementation of the D programming language http://dlang.org
Authors:

Source root/rmem.d

pure nothrow @nogc @trusted void* pureMalloc(size_t size);

pure nothrow @nogc @trusted void* pureCalloc(size_t nmemb, size_t size);

pure nothrow @nogc @system void* pureRealloc(void* ptr, size_t size);

pure nothrow @nogc @system void pureFree(void* ptr);
Pure variants of C's memory allocation functions malloc, calloc, and realloc and deallocation function free.
UNIX 98 requires that errno be set to ENOMEM upon failure. https://linux.die.net/man/3/malloc However, this is irrelevant for DMD's purposes, and best practice protocol for using errno is to treat it as an out parameter, and not something with state that can be relied on across function calls. So, we'll ignore it.
See Also:
D's rules for purity, which allow for memory allocation under specific circumstances.
pure nothrow char[] xarraydup(const(char)[] s);
Makes a null-terminated copy of the given string on newly allocated memory. The null-terminator won't be part of the returned string slice. It will be at position n where n is the length of the input string.
Parameters:
const(char)[] s string to copy
Returns:
A null-terminated copy of the input array.
Examples:
auto s1 = "foo";
auto s2 = s1.xarraydup;
s2[0] = 'b';
assert(s1 == "foo");
assert(s2 == "boo");
assert(*(s2.ptr + s2.length) == '\0');
string sEmpty;
assert(sEmpty.xarraydup is null);
pure nothrow T[] arraydup(T)(scope const T[] s);
Makes a copy of the given array on newly allocated memory.
Parameters:
T[] s array to copy
Returns:
A copy of the input array.
Examples:
auto s1 = [0, 1, 2];
auto s2 = s1.arraydup;
s2[0] = 4;
assert(s1 == [0, 1, 2]);
assert(s2 == [4, 1, 2]);
string sEmpty;
assert(sEmpty.arraydup is null);