@RMartinhoFernandes yeah, that meta stuff looks pretty straightforward (my knowledge is limited and experience is zero, so I will take a closer look later)...a quick glance made it seem like there were no preprocessor tricks to play to shorten it. Looks remarkably readable for metafunctions.
Could you use your constexpr trick there? Probably not?
a template function to tell if a value of type B can be represented accurately with a variable of type A, as in, a long that is <= MAX_INT can fit in an int.
@LewsTherin a string could very well use that with a similar principle...a std::string 20 characters long will not fit into a char[10] without some truncation, so it's really the same concept.
It's kind of like the Matrix, you have to open your mind to it.
"The Standard Generalized Markup Language (ISO 8879:1986 SGML) is an ISO-standard technology for defining generalized markup languages for documents." "HTML, XHTML, and XML are all examples of SGML-based languages."
Loosely speaking, if you require the use of the XML SGML declaration (found in /usr/share/xml/declaration/xml.decl for example), you are more or less constrained to XML (plus some additional restrictions).
The SGML document (your "hello world" if you will) consists of several parts. The formal part consists of an SGML Declaration and a Document Type Definition