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CppCast Episode 89: Jumping into C++ with Alex Allain

Episode 89 of CppCast the only podcast for C++ developers by C++ developers. In this episode Rob and Jason are joined by Alex Allain from Dropbox to talk about Dropbox's Djinni code generator and Alex's book Jumping into C++.

CppCast Episode 89: Jumping into C++ with Alex Allain

by Rob Irving and Jason Turner

About the interviewee:

Alex Allain is a Director of Engineering at Dropbox. He was one of the first engineers on the Dropbox Business product before leading Dropbox's Product Platform group, whose initiatives includes the Dropbox Sync Engine, shared mobile C++ and developer tools. Alex has run Cprogramming.com since 1998 and is the author of Jumping into C++, a book for new programmers.

Lambda Overdose

Do you feel the same way?

Lambda Overdose

by Arne Mertz

From the article:

Lambdas are a nice recent addition to C++. They are cool, they are hip, and they tend to be overused and misused.

Since lambda expressions came up in C++11 and got a huge boost in usability in C++14, they have been all the rage. Don’t get me wrong. Lambdas really are useful and cool and everything. But reading blog posts, the CppLang Slack channel and other sources lately has given me the impression that some people use lambdas in ways they should not be used...

Refactoring the HTML Text Editor for QWebEngine

An update on the HTML Text Editor I hacked with Qt and TinyMCE3:

Refactoring the HTML Text Editor for QWebEngine

by Jens Weller

From the article:

In the last post, I described my experience with using MSVC as a compiler in combination with QtCreator. The reason I set this up was, that with Qt 5.7 QWebkit isn't anymore supported, and the HTML TextEditor based on tinymce3 is a central part of my application. Instead of QWebkit there is now QWebEngine, based on chromium, a very fine solution...

Overload 137 is now available

ACCU’s Overload journal of February 2017 is out. It contains the following C++ related articles.

Overload 137 is now available

From the journal:

Mean Properties
Property based testing is all the rage. Russel Winder walks us through an example of properties an arithmetic mean function should have. by Russel Winder

The Importance of Back-of-Envelope Estimates
Guestimate questions make many people grumble. Sergey Ignatchenko reminds us why they matter. by Sergey Ignatchenko

Multiprocessing and Clusters in Python
Multiprocessing is possible in Python. Silas S. Brown shows us various ways. by Silas S. Brown

doctest – the Lightest C++ Unit Testing Framewor
C++ has many unit testing frameworks. Viktor Kirilov introduces doctest. by Viktor Kirilov

Correct Integer Operations with Minimal Runtime Penalties
Results of C++ integer operations are not guaranteed to be arithmetically correct. Robert Ramey introduces a library to enforce correct behaviour. by Robert Ramey

Quick Q: why there is no data-race in the following case?

Quick A: No write is triggered so no data race occurs.

Recently on SO:

why there is no data-race in the following case?

Data races are not static properties of your code. They are properties of the actual state of the program at execution time. So while that program could be in a state where the code would produce a data race, that's not the question.

The question is, given the state of the system, will the code cause a data race? And since the program is in a state such that neither thread will write to either variable, then the code will not cause a data race.

Data races aren't about what your code might do. It's about what they will do. Just as a function that takes a pointer isn't undefined behavior just because it uses the pointer without checking for NULL. It is only UB if someone passes a pointer that really is NULL.

C++ Weekly Episode 50: Inheriting Lambdas vs Generic Lambdas—Jason Turner

Episode 50 of C++ Weekly.

Inheriting Lambdas vs Generic Lambdas

by Jason Turner

About the show:

The last episode of C++ Weekly showed why and where we might want to inherit from lambdas and create a merged lambda with the signatures of two or more other lambdas. In this episode Jason compares a merged lambda with a generic lambda and what the pros and cons might be.

CppCast Episode 88: Microsoft's STL with Stephan T. Lavavej

Episode 88 of CppCast the only podcast for C++ developers by C++ developers. In this episode Rob and Jason are joined by Stephan T. Lavavej to talk about Microsoft's STL and some of the changes to the Library coming in the VS 2017 release.

CppCast Episode 88: Microsoft's STL with Stephan T. Lavavej

by Rob Irving and Jason Turner

About the interviewee:

Stephan T. Lavavej is a Principal Software Engineer at Microsoft, maintaining Visual C++'s implementation of the C++ Standard Library since 2007. He also designed a couple of C++14 features: make_unique and the transparent operator functors. He likes his initials (which people can actually spell) and cats (although he doesn't own any).

Using QtCreator together with the Visual Studio Build Tools

A first posting about working with Qt and Visual C++ in QtCreator

Using QtCreator together with the Visual Studio Build Tools

by Jens Weller

From the article:

For a while I've been using QtCreator as my IDE, mostly because its deep integration with Qt, as most of my projects are Qt related. With this, I also preferred (and still do a little) to use the MinGW builds of Qt on Windows. In the past, as GCC was a little bit better with the newer standards, today, well, never change a running system...