basics

A first look at the program of Meeting C++ 2026

With the voting on the talks ending on Sunday, Meeting C++ has now published its program, take a look at the talk listing.

A first release of the program for Meeting C++ 2026

by Jens Weller

From the article:

With the voting ending on Sunday, there is now a first overview on the program of Meeting C++ 2026 available!

As early bird tickets are selling out, its time to get your tickets!

You can take a look at the accepted talks, this is the main track:

    Robert Leahy - What Are We Synchronizing?
    Ivan Čukić - Contracts and hardened libraries - a bright future for C++ safety?
    Henrik Vallgren - Compile time is the future of Automotive Software
    Dawid Zalewski - C++26 static reflection: All you need is annotations
    Andreas Fertig - When Your Compiler Runs Your Code
    Matt Godbolt - Compiler Explorer in 2026: Sandboxes, Storage & Strangers' Code
    Antoine Morrier - Thread-safety compile-time guaranteed in C++
    Daniela Engert - Same C++, but quicker to the finish line
    Giuseppe D'Angelo - Not-so-trivial relocation in C++
    Guy Davidson - Profiles are coming
    Klaus Iglberger - Design Patterns - The Most Common Misconceptions (3 of N)

 

Visit Meeting C++ 2025 with assistance and your wheelchair

Sharing an opportunity for those needing assistance to travel and lodge: the conference hotel of Meeting C++ has special rooms for you!

Visit Meeting C++ 2025 with assistance and your wheelchair

by Jens Weller

From the article:

As you may not be aware about this opportunity, I wanted to highlight that the Vienna House Andel's Berlin Hotel offers accessibility rooms for those who need them.

a picture showing a shower with hand rails and a chair

Meeting C++ in Berlin has been visited by folks in wheel chairs, and I thought I highlight this possiblity. Recently when looking through pictures provided by my hotel contact, I've seen aboves picture of an accessible bathroom, which sparked my interest in finding out more about them. While I knew they existed, I didn't know the Hotel has actually 14 rooms of them, and that they each have a twin room for an assistant to stay. So if such a room is needed for your stay, wether you bring a wheel chair or not - now you know that its possible...