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-rw-r--r--exercises/080_anonymous_structs.zig15
1 files changed, 12 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/exercises/080_anonymous_structs.zig b/exercises/080_anonymous_structs.zig
index bbf3690..0ca8f0c 100644
--- a/exercises/080_anonymous_structs.zig
+++ b/exercises/080_anonymous_structs.zig
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@
//
// const Foo = struct {};
//
-// * The value of @typeName(Foo) is "Foo".
+// * The value of @typeName(Foo) is "<filename>.Foo".
//
// A struct is also given a name when you return it from a
// function:
@@ -61,16 +61,25 @@ pub fn main() void {
};
print("[{s}: {},{},{}] ", .{
- @typeName(@TypeOf(circle1)),
+ stripFname(@typeName(@TypeOf(circle1))),
circle1.center_x,
circle1.center_y,
circle1.radius,
});
print("[{s}: {d:.1},{d:.1},{d:.1}]\n", .{
- @typeName(@TypeOf(circle2)),
+ stripFname(@typeName(@TypeOf(circle2))),
circle2.center_x,
circle2.center_y,
circle2.radius,
});
}
+
+// Perhaps you remember the "narcissistic fix" for the type name
+// in Ex. 065? We're going to do the same thing here: use a hard-
+// coded slice to return the type name. That's just so our output
+// look prettier. Indulge your vanity. Programmers are beautiful.
+fn stripFname(mytype: []const u8) []const u8 {
+ return mytype[22..];
+}
+// The above would be an instant red flag in a "real" program.