Does anybody have real experience with introducing ranges in large codebase and how it affects compile times. I know I can compile toy examples, but IDK how it works in 100k-1M LOC codebase if we allow ppl "randomly" including <ranges>. If it matters I care about latest versions of MSVC/clang/gcc, but obviously any data point is valuable.
@Morwenn do you remember their titles, most stuff I see is just: hate on ranges since map reduce looks horrible, or some general intro stuff to ranges...
@nwp when you wait 20 min for build every time you touch a GOD header... not fun :)
Well, that's a separate issue to including ranges.
I understand that short compile times are a desirable property worth putting effort into, but still, "compile time driven development" just ... feels bad.
@nwp yes, also CMake is terrible, concepts do not help with error messages... but I still like a lot of parts of C++ :) But anways thatks for the replies, maybe somebody will see this and reply with their experiences.
With C++11 you can even clean up more with brace initialization: std::vector<std::string> ret{std::istream_iterator<std::string>(buffer), {}};. And with C++17 you can even say std::vector using CTAD :) — sehe1 min ago
@JerryCoffin I was actually looking for one of your answers splitting strings by other delimiters than whitespace, because ISTR you wrote one.
Maybe I'm misremembering and it was Dietmar Kühl or somebody elase
@nwp Definitely not, but what @StackedCrooked said