C & C++

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In the Qt 6.7 release, we enabled support for C++20 comparison and also back-ported some of its features to C++17. This blog post will give you an overview of the comparison enhancements we are taking advantage of and offer guidance on implementing them in your custom classes.

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Hi there! Thanks everyone who could join us on the previous talk on parsing C++.

I’m happy to announce a new talk!

In this talk on the С++ semantics, we will take a look at symbols and name resolution. We will discuss different kinds of lookups, scope importing, overload resolution, as well as templates and their specifics.

Date: November 06, 2024, 12:00 PM UTC+1

I invite all C++ enthusiasts to join! - https://pvs-studio.com/en/webinar/

@cpp @cppguide @programming_discussions @cplusplus @[email protected]

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Safety Profiles were introduced in 2015 with the promise to detect all lifetime safety defects in existing C++ code. It was a bold claim. But after a decade of effort, Profiles failed to produce a specification, reliable implementation or any tangible benefit for C++ safety. The cause of this failure involves a number of mistaken premises at the core of its design:

  1. “Zero annotation is required by default, because existing C++ source code already contains sufficient information”
  2. “We should not require a safe function annotation”
  3. “Do not add a feature that requires viral annotation”
  4. “Do not add a feature that requires heavy annotation”

The parameters of the problem make success impossible. This paper examines the contradictions in these premises, explains why the design didn’t improve safety in the past and why it won’t improve safety in the future.

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Does the C++ design follow the zero-overhead principle? Should it? I think it should, even if that principle isn’t trivial to define precisely. Some of you (for some definition of “you”) seem not to. We– WG21 as an organization – haven’t taken it seriously enough to make it a requirement for acceptance of new features. I think that is a serious problem, but one that we (WG21) should be able to handle. This paper offers some examples.

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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

i've been playing with cppfront for a few minutes now and it's been a surprisingly pleasant experience so far. i'm tempted to try it out at work to see what happens, but i wanna know if anyone tried to use it in production and what your experiences are

for those who haven't heard of it, cppfront is a cpp2 to c++ compiler, a bit like coffeescript for js. cpp2 is herb sutter's proposal of a new and cleaner c++ syntax with better ergonomics, better orthogonality, and better defaults

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PVS-Studio on CppCast: Exploring the World of C++ Parsing and Analysis

Yuri Minaev, the C++ static analyzer architect at PVS-Studio, joins CppCast to talk about static analysis and how PVS-Studio helps develop software.

https://pvs-studio.com/en/blog/video/11127/?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mastodon&utm_campaign=podcast&utm_content=ccpcast

@cpp

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/15682818

The next major version of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC), 14.1, was released on May 7 2024. Like every major GCC release, this version brings many additions, improvements, bug fixes, and new features.

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Yes, it is probably a weird question, but I tried a lot, and I started to think that maybe is impossible to overload this template function properly:

#include <iterator>

class Foo
{
private:
    const int arr[5] = {10, 20, 30, 40, 50};
public:
    const int* begin() const { return arr; }

friend auto std::begin<>(const Foo &f) -> decltype(f.begin());
}

It always throw the same error (in GCC 12.2.0):

main.cxx:10:13: error: template-id ‘begin<>’ for ‘const int* std::begin<>(const Foo&)’ does not match any template declaration

I just wanna know if is possible do things like this. Thanks.

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I am writing a unit test and mocking library in C and I want to set the call stack memory to some pre determined value like memset. I want to do this before the test function is called so the test writer can verify they aren't using uninitialized memory in their tests. Is there any somewhat portable way to do this?

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/4072147

Is there a library for C, providing thread safe (high performance), and structured logging? An example for rust is the Tracing crate for rust (from Tokio). It should support several outputs as well.

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/1447800

The latest major version of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC), 13.1, was released in April 2023. Like every major GCC release, this version brings many additions, improvements, bug fixes, and new features. GCC 13 is already the system compiler in Fedora 38. Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) users will get GCC 13 in the Red Hat GCC Toolset (RHEL 8 and RHEL 9). It's also possible to try GCC 13 on godbolt.org and similar web pages.

Like the article I wrote about GCC 10 and GCC 12, this article describes only new features implemented in the C++ front end; it does not discuss developments in the C++ language itself. Interesting changes in the standard C++ library that comes with GCC 13 are described in a separate blog post: New C features in GCC 13

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Trip report from the first C++26 ISO meeting by foonathan

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Trip report from the first C++26 ISO meeting

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r/cpp comments

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Reddit comments r/computerscience

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