Don't get me wrong. I like UDLs, and I have a set of them for std::strings and for std::chrono::durations, but I'm not happy that they're not #1 templatable, #2 composable. It's as if they were pushed into the standard in a hurry.
@R.MartinhoFernandes It's the opposite for me. I don't know anything to implement really. I get demotivated because someone would have probably done it better and before me.
@TonyTheLion Because there's no reason to overload on "compiler-sized" integers.
There's unsigned long long for integers of any size, and long double for floats of any size.
And there's the templated form template <char...> int operator "" _blah(), that takes the numbers a variadic pack of chars (1000_blah would be operator"" _blah<'1','0','0','0'>(), for example).
@TonyTheLion Well, you know how T { foo } constructs a T out of foo? E.g. something as simple as int { 42 } results in an int.
Well, you can't easily do that with arrays. char[] { foo } is wrong the same way that char[] f; is: the [] need to appear at the end. And the language doesn't provide for char { foo } [] (thankfully).
It's the same as doing char f[] = initializer;, save for that fact that the result is an unnamed temporary. So there is actually a size to that array, which is deduced from the initializer.