Converts the given value from little endian to the native endianness and
returns it. The value is given as a ubyte[n] where n is the size
of the target type. You must give the target type as a template argument,
because there are multiple types with the same size and so the type of the
argument is not enough to determine the return type.
Taking a ubyte[n] helps prevent accidentally using a swapped value
as a regular one (and in the case of floating point values, it's necessary,
because the FPU will mess up any swapped floating point values. So, you
can't actually have swapped floating point values as floating point values).
real is not supported, because its size is implementation-dependent
and therefore could vary from machine to machine (which could make it
unusable if you tried to transfer it to another machine).
Converts the given value from little endian to the native endianness and returns it. The value is given as a ubyte[n] where n is the size of the target type. You must give the target type as a template argument, because there are multiple types with the same size and so the type of the argument is not enough to determine the return type.
Taking a ubyte[n] helps prevent accidentally using a swapped value as a regular one (and in the case of floating point values, it's necessary, because the FPU will mess up any swapped floating point values. So, you can't actually have swapped floating point values as floating point values).
real is not supported, because its size is implementation-dependent and therefore could vary from machine to machine (which could make it unusable if you tried to transfer it to another machine).