Must say I have great self control on the internet. Sometimes I am very tempted to argue online. Then I remembered that even if I win, I still lower myself by even joining the argument, especially with a stranger and a lower life form.
Best strategy is forget and walk away in this case.
It is frustrating that C++ doesn't come with batteries included. For every project I join I end up having to configure some external tool to enforce conventions, seek out common issues that the compiler doesn't warn you on, and end up writing the same Utils or writing the same shit over and over that std doesn't provide you with
Awesome video, I have not checked all the figures. But I did check some:
When you stack all humans on top of each other, it's roughly 9 times the diameter of the sun ~_~
Why aren't there any toilet paper with all interesting facts written on them, or free/cheap toilet paper with advertisement written on them? The later might even help to alleviate climate problem :x
@nwp well, their shit is now already on the toilet paper ready to be flushed. Otherwise they'd have to print specific separate flyers, transport them everywhere (by car) so they can be distributed across the whole country so that at the end people can just read them flush it or throw it away
@A.Smoliak But would you rather have no choice but to live with my idea of how to do that shit instead of your own? Do you think there's so much agreement and uniformity on all this that everybody needs to follow the same practices for every project, regardless of size, complexity or purpose?
@A.Smoliak some people are on the clang-ecosystem where there is a much stronger coupling between the compiler and linter
@A.Smoliak typical complaints about "batteries included" aren't the linter, they are about lack of a package manager or GUI
@A.Smoliak but I don't think there is a single convention mostly because of trade offs, for example C++ Core Guidelines at one point tried to get everybody to use "dynamic_cast" event though almost every time you know the type. The trade off is that you might catch an rare bug by using dynamic_cast. (although dynamic_cast was designed for something else)
@Mikhail Obviously you cannot and should not enforce The One True Convention, but the fact is that you cannot configure The One True Convention into the toolchain, though I never worked with clang, only GCC and MSVC, and the package managing system is absolutely horrible.
I recently joined a team where for many years there was no convention to speak of. If the compiler gave you an easy way to configure it, it would've happened. Right now we've gotten ReSharper and I'm almost done with configuring it, but for the most part there's no way to enforce a certain standard with compiler errors.
my team didn't even know move semantics more or less before I arrived so it's good
yeah but sometimes when you construct a class you want to give it ownership of some hard to build object like string or avoid any copies by giving it a shared_ptr
I don't think knowing C++ sells so well.. Usually people who pay you are the ones who don't understand it :(
I really liked how Rust tries to find as many issues in compile time, and their package managing system seems really simple to use, and there's built in unit testing and fuzz testing and all that jazz
You could say that C++ can also have it, but it requires a huge amount of training to reach the same level
Rust comes in batteries included, and takes far less training to make similar software. I think the fact that C++ has to be backwards compatible with C and previous versions is really bogging it down..
Then again, I didn't use Rust at all, and I'm sure every language has it's flaws.. I just know happen to know a lot of flaws from C++
I've worked with a few Rust-> C++ people. Basically their productivity improves because they don't need to fight the borrow checker and you can do more meta programing in C++. But it takes a few weeks for them to get used to the tooling.
Tooling is also organization specific for example Google has a bunch of custom build systems, coding style, and bullshit culture. But Google is big. So C++ can't break free from them.
Yeah but most big projects have their own build systems
The wheel is re-invented every time
How many times have you seen or written some stupid StringUtils class that does things that std::string doesn't give you? or outright use some other string..
there is actually a slow rolling discussion on this channels about some issues with constexpr strings including for example, how these objects look across translation units
@A.Smoliak depends on the difficulty of the feature, but years is not unreasonable, especially as 3 compilers (gcc,msvc,clang) need to implement it
it's always complicated, especially for those who are reading it the first time
I know that if I end up throwing more cores at the problem it will go away
Throwing more manpower at it is really stupid
The main reason why I really want modules is that it allows you to manage what comes in and what comes out much cleaner, and you can make single file source and not .h and .cpp
compile times are nice as well, but really (more cores)
Often times I'm forced to break the SRP because I don't want 6 pairs of files each 50 lines
basically there is this pathological senario where people organize working code. Modules makes this especially appealing because it supposedly increases compile time at the expense of code maintaince.