I assume they just convinced their manager by pointing broadly to apple and llvm and going "look apple does it too"
although I guess they needed to actually pay a hefty amount for it. Because if I remember right they actually licensed large parts of it from embarcadero
Btw. the over-alignment bug from yesterday was not actually GCCs fault, but an error in a library I was using.
I am surprised at your implementation of operator(), is it intentional not to use universal references and perfect forwarding for the arguments ? — Matthieu M.Dec 5 '13 at 13:47
@MatthieuM. very late response: yes, because otherwise we might move multiple times. — sehe11 hours ago
We have this in production code where we had to port MIPS code to x86-64
https://codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/54342/template-for-endianness-free-code-data-always-packed-as-big-endian
Works well for us.
It's basically a template without any storage, the template arguments specify the ...
@Mikhail I'm not sure what this means. STL's parent have an open marriage?
@Mikhail More seriously though, what gave you the idea that it's open source? As far as I know, they still license (large parts of) it from Dinkumware Ltd. Based on what I know of P.J. Plauger, I doubt he'd be very happy about his code being treated as open source.
@Mgetz I this case, I suspect it was more lack of money--pretty sure they'd simply saturated the market already. Microsoft is nearly the only vendor left with a proprietary compiler.
@Mgetz Now that Oracle is pretty much out of the server business, I'm not sure they maintain their compiler any more. I guess they might--I'm just not sure.
@Mgetz That could easily be. It probably also helps that P.J. Plauger is now in his mid-70's, so I guess you could hardly blame him for pretty much retiring.