@sehe Good point, although this isn't required in the context where this will be used.
@sehe Currently (2am, just returned from a birthday party) trying to wrap my head around it...
@melak47 Yeah, it misses a critical +1. Did I ever mention this code was un-compiled? *sheepish_grin*
@melak47 That's fine, the more boring they are, the faster this will be. (So far this code copies from a std::deque into a std::vector to be able to pass all items at once. It occurred to me that a queue might, on average, be not much less chunky than a vector, and we'd be shorter one container copy operation.
"nonsubbed"? "this subclass in another package"? Huh. I thought I knew Java. — sehe6 mins ago
@Telkitty How to tell who hasn't got children. I mean, I've never seen this kind of washing tubs - don't know what is in them or what they're used for, but they look very very convenient indeed.
@jodocus and Christian Hackl, It don't have to be const char. I am new to c++, I copied first thing from internet for declaring strings. — some_guy5 mins ago
Where have you guys used std::futures? I've used them mostly as objects to join() calls to std::async... Do people really build large lists of futures and then process them out?
Hmm, do you think.then might be a good way to implement chained operations? The concern is that, constructing the chain seems to have some overhead compared to just using a bunch of if statements...
For example, in my work, I have to apply a bunch of image transforms depending on a settings object. Convert the settings into bunch of chained std::futures?
IME there's enough warts (e.g. unpacking/sharing futures, volatile APIs) to make it ... iffy.
Then again, I was certainly going to use when_all to await distributed transactions (given the chance).
So, for all tools, there's a niche where it will do nicely.
@Mikhail Isn't that just regular functional composition. Really not dependent on what value is being transformed, right. What is the gain of passing futures instead of the products?