I don't know which algorithms I'll need yet. I'm working on a building automation system that will schedule things according to recurring patterns (the 3rd of every month, every Sunday, etc).
Ok. The date lib wraps things like that with syntax along the lines of:
auto ymd = 3_d/m/y;
Or
auto ymd = sun[1]/m/y; // first sunday of the month and year.
At any rate, if there's some date manipulation thing you want to do, feel free to ask how to do it in my date library. If it isn't already there, I'll show you how to do it, and maybe consider adding it.
Are you on VS by any chance? I'm still working on getting ported to VS.
Then you're good to go. I'm ported to gcc-5.2.0. I haven't tried earlier than that, but don't anticipate any problems. No Y2038 problems unless you specifically ask for seconds in a int32_t. By default seconds will be in an int64_t from your chrono lib.
No problem. Easy to misunderstand a brand new lib.
Yes. It heavily depends on C++14 constexpr rules for doing date calculations at compile time. However it will auto-port to C++11. You will loose the capability to do computations at compile-time, but otherwise remain fully functional.