And yeah, maybe it will be added one day. But I doubt it. Once again, the committee prefers to prioritize the important the features that really justify the added complexity. Something that can be done with a bit of library code stands next to no chance of being added to the core language
but 25 years ago, the language was smaller and younger and it was easier to add features. Plus, even then they were inherited from C, rather than being added to C++ as a new feature
But yes, if octal literals were proposed as a feature of C++0x, the same argument could be made, and they would probably have been rejected too
I think I've said it 3 times now, no, I think the feature would be relatively easy to implement, and I don't think the difficulty of the task matters
the reason it wasn't added is not "oh my god, that is such a huge feature, we could never implement that"
but "we have a backlog of literally hundreds of features that are more important, and we've already had to cut a huge number of more important features from C++0x."
You make it sound like small features are free to add. And they're not
@Ricky65 again, you don't need to. You can look up a few existing proposals to see how they're usually structured, and then write one yourself, and send it off to one of the committee members
@Ricky65 yep, and C++0x got formally approved by ISO just now, but you can propose features for the next revision :)
and again, someone has to do it. If you think a feature is important, make sure the committee knows about it
if even you would rather use an user defined literal than go to the work of adding the feature to the language, who's going to do the actual work of adding it?
It was an approximation, but the real deal is a lot more powerful
a lot of core language features started their life as library extensions. I doubt we'd ever have had decltype, if Boost hadn't made result_of, thus highlighting both the limitations of a library implementation, and the usefulness of the feature
it's much the same story with lambdas. Boost.Lambda was an impressive library implementation, and the committee actually looked hard at standardizing lambdas based on that
but eventually realized that there were too many limitations that could only be avoided by adding it as a core language feature instead
typeof is much more like std::type_id, which C++98 had
of course, you might be right. I obviously don't know what might have happened. But if the committee had thought the problem could be solved as a library extension, they would have preferred that
@Ricky65 I can't afford to travel across the world 2-3 times a year, I don't have the time, and to be honest, I don't think I have the expertise for it either :)
I don't think so. Maybe a few people on SO would say I am, but I think there's pretty far up to most of the committee members in terms of C++ skills and knowledge still :)
besides, expert or not, most of the current members are sponsored by their employer. The committee doesn't pay your expenses, after all, so you either have to do that yourself, or get your employer or someone to pay :)
aw, annoying. Tried optimizing my library, and ended up slowing it down by 3% or so
If it'd been a bigger slowdown I could just throw the changes away as a failed experiment, but when the difference is so tiny I have to wonder if there's something else I should tweak a bit that'd make it faster