Warning: Some posts on this platform may contain adult material intended for mature audiences only. Viewer discretion is advised. By clicking ‘Continue’, you confirm that you are 18 years or older and consent to viewing explicit content.
That first link is about a document from 2006, while C++ became a lot safer with C++11 in 2011. It’s much easier to write safe C++ now, if you follow current guidelines:
I would say the standard has changed. The current guidelines require you to use features that didn’t exist before C++11. C++11 was a huge change and it made C++ a lot nicer. The updates since then have generally been improvements but more incremental than revolutionary.
Print from html to PDF in a browser was 708 pages, so maybe half that if printed like a book (less whitespace etc.). About like a Rust textbook. Still a lot I guess.
That first link is about a document from 2006, while C++ became a lot safer with C++11 in 2011. It’s much easier to write safe C++ now, if you follow current guidelines:
https://isocpp.github.io/CppCoreGuidelines/
Yeah the standards for safe C++ haven’t changed, no matter how much the language changes.
I would say the standard has changed. The current guidelines require you to use features that didn’t exist before C++11. C++11 was a huge change and it made C++ a lot nicer. The updates since then have generally been improvements but more incremental than revolutionary.
Dude core guidelines is like 2000 pages, C++ is a meme language
Print from html to PDF in a browser was 708 pages, so maybe half that if printed like a book (less whitespace etc.). About like a Rust textbook. Still a lot I guess.
Well I’m old so I need a larger font size