@nwp In general, when you have a bunch consumers waiting on the same mutex for a notify_all(). The consumers might want to have separate static buffers?
Has anyone ever used the Google Test unit testing library? If so, what is your take on it and how do you compare it to other testing frameworks (e.g. Catch2) that you may have used?
@Tanishq-Banyal Because the language says so. It probably is otherwise ambiguous in some cases or something. It's a bit annoying, but you get used to it.
Also it's already the simplified case. People had to do the C array trick before which is even worse.
(See for example this answer, specifically the int t_[].)
For instance, I now want to somehow convert a std::basic_ostream (I think that s what it is called....) to a boost::asio::buffer. I had a quick look through boost's documentation to see whether that would easily be possible. But didnt find anything quickly. I guess if I keep on digging I might maybe find something
Google didnt give me a off the shelf answer/solution
and I very often want to convert stuff somehow...
how do you deal with such situations usually? Or what would be the best way to deal with this?
I searched for "std::ostream to boost::asio::buffer" and the first result is stackoverflow.com/questions/5675358 of which the first answer looks very promising.
@Mikhail This is an interesting one. I was wondering if this would not have a performance cost if the print function occurs many times with many different arguments. This must be using a template under the hood (because of auto parameter), so it should create a version of the print function for each distinct usage, isn't that right? Would this not be inneficient?
@MangaD btw std::visit has a known template explosion when using visitor on multiple types deduced with auto for example, void compare(auto a, auto b) over a std::variant with 30 types will generate 30 x 30 function signatures :-/