My application (CLI) needs a JSON configuration file. But I am too lazy to write another GUI Configuration widget. in QT. So is there any reusable Component ?
What if someone want an UTF-16 string (not text) from a native_text if you do decide to let it hold wchar_t units? Is there an appropriate member that you are in fact okay with having for every spec?
@EtiennedeMartel My cli app needs to get a config file to work. which is in JSON format. but its now going to be used by non technical users. and they cannot write JSON file in hand. So they asked me to develop a GUI to generate that file.
@R.MartinhoFernandes To clarify I was making sure that the converse functionality is available (native wchar_t -> char16_t). You were worried about native text making wchar_tavailable. Since the functionality is available (even though it takes a conversion) then that's fine by me.
@CaptainGiraffe Anybody young enough to have watched TBC when they were 15 deserves it. Oh, and thank you. I've been getting intensive insensitivity training ever since I got married. It's good to know my time hasn't been completely wasted.
@EtiennedeMartel Sometimes refactoring template code is painful. And Boost.Range is not helpful. I think I'll blame Boost.Range for everything that annoys me in this project.
@StackedCrooked I don't know. I'd think refactoring dynamically typed code is worse: you don't have a compiler to work as a checklist. But the most important bits are always test coverage.
It's painful when the typing has to be explicit, that's a lot of verbosity. But when that's taken care of by the language I find myself thinking about what I'm doing and the types help me.
I do think it's misleading to call that 'coroutines'. I don't really keep in mind the distinction between stackless coroutines and the usual kind (or one of the usual kinds).
@DeadMG I didn't say that. But they're still painful as heck to write.
I know how such lambdas could look, because I've looked at lots of the state machines generated by the C# compiler (when I was hacking on boo I used Reflector all the time). And they're not pretty.
@NikiC Normally, I'd congratulate you, but it's PHP, and being a contributor to the PHP codebase is like claiming to have contributed to the US health care system.
Well, my biggest gripe with Boost.Range is that writing iterators is annoying as heck, and in general writing a new boost range is writing an iterator.
std::iostream classes lack specialization for char16_t and char32_t and boost::format depends on streams. What to replace streams with for utf16 strings (preferably with localization support)?
@R.MartinhoFernandes Don't bother with text, just use png's for all user interactions. Might look a bit off on the command line though. And maybe a tad tough to grep.
difficult to interop with C++ code written in header files if you don't have a C++ compiler to hand.
I need Clang to perform name lookup, overload resolution, name mangling, and such things
else I might be able to recognize C++ code, but it'd be difficult to actually do anything about it
after all, if I want to code generate calls to C++ code, I need to go from "It's a header file" to llvm::Function*, llvm::Value*, llvm::Type* and suchthings.