
Security News
Vite Releases Technical Preview of Rolldown-Vite, a Rust-Based Bundler
Vite releases Rolldown-Vite, a Rust-based bundler preview offering faster builds and lower memory usage as a drop-in replacement for Vite.
github.com/D-Programming-GDC/GDC
GDC is a GPL implementation of the D compiler which integrates the open source D front end with GCC.
The GNU D Compiler (GDC) project was originally started by David Friedman in 2004 until early 2007 when he disappeared from the D scene, and was no longer able to maintain GDC. Following a revival attempt in 2008, GDC is now under the lead of Iain Buclaw who has been steering the project since 2009 with the assistance of its contributors, without them the project would not have been nearly as successful as it has been.
Documentation on GDC is available from the wiki. Any bugs or issues found with using GDC should be reported at our bugzilla site. For help with GDC, the D.gnu mailing list is the place to go with questions or problems.
Work is currently under way to merge GDC into a future release of GCC. Assistance of any sort during this time would be invaluably appreciated. Feel free to contact via email or join in at #d.gdc on FreeNode.
The master branch of this project closely follows GCC development branch, which if you intend to use GDC for production applications, is likely not the version of GCC you want to build against. For versions of GDC compatible with GCC releases, checkout one of the following branches:
FAQs
Unknown package
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Security News
Vite releases Rolldown-Vite, a Rust-based bundler preview offering faster builds and lower memory usage as a drop-in replacement for Vite.
Research
Security News
A malicious npm typosquat uses remote commands to silently delete entire project directories after a single mistyped install.
Research
Security News
Malicious PyPI package semantic-types steals Solana private keys via transitive dependency installs using monkey patching and blockchain exfiltration.