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---
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title: D
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short-description: Compiling D sources
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...
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# Compiling D applications
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Meson has support for compiling D programs. A minimal `meson.build`
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file for D looks like this:
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```meson
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project('myapp', 'd')
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executable('myapp', 'app.d')
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```
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## [Conditional compilation](https://dlang.org/spec/version.html)
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If you are using the
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[version()](https://dlang.org/spec/version.html#version-specification)
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feature for conditional compilation, you can use it using the
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`d_module_versions` target property:
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```meson
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project('myapp', 'd')
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executable('myapp', 'app.d', d_module_versions: ['Demo', 'FeatureA'])
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```
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For debugging, [debug()](https://dlang.org/spec/version.html#debug)
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conditions are compiled automatically in debug builds, and extra
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identifiers can be added with the `d_debug` argument:
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```meson
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project('myapp', 'd')
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executable('myapp', 'app.d', d_debug: [3, 'DebugFeatureA'])
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```
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## In `declare_dependency`
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*Since 0.62.0*, when declaring your own dependency using `declare_dependency`,
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it is possible to add parameters for D specific features, e.g. to propagate
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conditional compilation versions:
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```meson
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my_dep = declare_dependency(
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# ...
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d_module_versions: ['LUA_53'],
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d_import_dirs: include_directories('my_lua_folder'),
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)
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```
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Accepted D specific parameters are `d_module_versions` and `d_import_dirs`
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(DMD `-J` switch).
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## Using embedded unittests
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If you are using embedded [unittest
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functions](https://dlang.org/spec/unittest.html), your source code
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needs to be compiled twice, once in regular mode, and once with
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unittests active. This is done by setting the `d_unittest` target
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property to `true`. Meson will only ever pass the respective
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compiler's `-unittest` flag, and never have the compiler generate an
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empty main function. If you need that feature in a portable way,
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create an empty `main()` function for unittests yourself, since the
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GNU D compiler does not have this feature.
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This is an example for using D unittests with Meson:
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```meson
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project('myapp_tested', 'd')
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myapp_src = ['app.d', 'alpha.d', 'beta.d']
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executable('myapp', myapp_src)
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test_exe = executable('myapp_test', myapp_src, d_unittest: true)
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test('myapptest', test_exe)
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```
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# Compiling D libraries and installing them
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Building D libraries is a straightforward process, not different from
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how C libraries are built in Meson. You should generate a pkg-config
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file and install it, in order to make other software on the system
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find the dependency once it is installed.
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This is an example on how to build a D shared library:
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```meson
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project('mylib', 'd', version: '1.2.0')
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project_soversion = 0
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glib_dep = dependency('glib-2.0')
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my_lib = library('mylib',
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['src/mylib/libfunctions.d'],
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dependencies: [glib_dep],
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install: true,
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version: meson.project_version(),
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soversion: project_soversion,
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d_module_versions: ['FeatureA', 'featureB']
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)
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pkgc = import('pkgconfig')
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pkgc.generate(name: 'mylib',
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libraries: my_lib,
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subdirs: 'd/mylib',
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version: meson.project_version(),
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description: 'A simple example D library.',
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d_module_versions: ['FeatureA']
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)
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install_subdir('src/mylib/', install_dir: 'include/d/mylib/')
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```
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It is important to make the D sources install in a subdirectory in the
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include path, in this case `/usr/include/d/mylib/mylib`. All D
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compilers include the `/usr/include/d` directory by default, and if
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your library would be installed into `/usr/include/d/mylib`, there is
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a high chance that, when you compile your project again on a machine
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where you installed it, the compiler will prefer the old installed
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include over the new version in the source tree, leading to very
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confusing errors.
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This is an example of how to use the D library we just built and
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installed in an application:
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```meson
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project('myapp', 'd')
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mylib_dep = dependency('mylib', version: '>= 1.2.0')
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myapp_src = ['app.d', 'alpha.d', 'beta.d']
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executable('myapp', myapp_src, dependencies: [mylib_dep])
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```
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Please keep in mind that the library and executable would both need to
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be built with the exact same D compiler and D compiler version. The D
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ABI is not stable across compilers and their versions, and mixing
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compilers will lead to problems.
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# Integrating with DUB
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DUB is a fully integrated build system for D, but it is also a way to
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provide dependencies. Adding dependencies from the [D package
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registry](https://code.dlang.org/) is pretty straight forward. You can
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find how to do this in
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[Dependencies](Dependencies.md#some-notes-on-dub). You can also
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automatically generate a `dub.json` file as explained in
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[Dlang](Dlang-module.md#generate_dub_file).
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