I'd say knowing Java is more about knowing the libraries, there's nothing too esoteric about the language itself (AFAIK) But C++ is way awesomer because of things sitting right there in the language standard that scare many people
@RMartinhoFernandes unless I'm confused, you're talking about passing function pointers at runtime, right? My understanding was that constexpr functions behaved pretty well at runtime.
It's just that this is a nerdy forum, and I'm pretty nerdy, but I also usually break some bones on faces and my hands when people talk to me like that guy
@MrAnubis http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_completeness Of course, I can't be bothered to read that right now, but essentially means that any program can be represented with a particular language
@LewsTherin have you read much about them? For me, I started using the STL, then moved to using generic algorithms, then to writing simple template classes. I'm very interested now in template metaprogramming and other goodies. C++11 aside, there is tons to dig around in in C++, especially if you don't have tons of time to dedicate.
@Lews if you've used the standard library, then you've used them. The simplest use case is probably writing a template specialization for a standard library function for one of your types.
@LewsTherin I use templates whenever I want some algorithm/type to work for different types. Or when I'm too lazy to spell out a complicated iterator type.
@MrAnubis Maybe ask Stroustrup, he'd probably say yes...anyway, metaprogramming techniques are being discovered still I think, and cxx11 will continue that
there are rules about typename and where it can and can't be used, and it can cause ambiguity possibly in the template declaration. class seemed lame to me, but you see it in STL source, but I think boost uses typename