# Test overloading of procs when used as function pointers import strutils proc parseInt(x: float): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt(x: bool): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt(x: float32): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt(x: int8): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt(x: TFile): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt(x: char): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt(x: int16): int {.noSideEffect.} = nil proc parseInt[T](x: T): int = echo x; 34 type TParseInt = proc (x: string): int {.noSideEffect.} var q = TParseInt(parseInt) p: TParseInt = parseInt proc takeParseInt(x: proc (y: string): int {.noSideEffect.}): int = result = x("123") echo "Give a list of numbers (separated by spaces): " var x = stdin.readline.split.map(parseInt).max echo x, " is the maximum!" echo "another number: ", takeParseInt(parseInt) type TFoo[a,b] = object lorem: a ipsum: b proc bar[a,b](f: TFoo[a,b], x: a) = echo(x, " ", f.lorem, f.ipsum) proc bar[a,b](f: TFoo[a,b], x: b) = echo(x, " ", f.lorem, f.ipsum) discard parseInt[string]("yay")