FetchBoostContent
boost
FetchBoostContent | boost | |
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2 | 8 | |
10 | 21 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 1.5 | |
almost 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
CMake | C++ | |
Boost Software License 1.0 | Boost Software License 1.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
FetchBoostContent
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Boost.URL ACCEPTED, get the beta now!
c) If you are concerned that you won't be able to do that from CMake, like with FetchContent or something, then there are scripts that can do that for you. Or you can use boostdep to bundle the subset of boost you need with your library.
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New Boost.Unordered containers have BIG improvements!
You can fetch it with only the individual header-only modules on which it depends with https://github.com/alandefreitas/FetchBoostContent
boost
- Full-Text Search has been added to the boost website. It looks into all the Boost libraries and their documentation.
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The New Boost Website Goes Beta
We do not control boost.org, and putting this on a subdomain imputes an authority for decision-making we don't have. Building it on some temporary domains, then presenting it as a choice is the only approach compatible with Boost values.
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Is it just me or is the quality of the Boost API docs just.. kind of terrible? Like compare it to cppreference (very good) or Qt docs (also great).
Not at all. There is no "they", the Boost Libraries is just a collection of individual libraries that each have their own author or maintainer, usually unpaid (although the C++ Alliance has changed that somewhat). The only funding that "Boost" gets is from running the C++Now conference, and some of that pays for the hosting of boost.org.
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Boost down?
Though the links within it seem to be to boost.org and therefore fail to be resolved. Well I can manually replace them with https://www.boostcpp.org/ like:
- New Boost.Unordered containers have BIG improvements!
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Ask HN: What Happened to Boost.org?
Oh wow, it behaves incorrectly...when I visit http://boost.org/ or https://... it shows spam on my side, whereas when I visit https://www.boost.org/ it works as expected.
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Why I support GCC-rs
If you wondered why Boost headers look like hell that's because once your library ends up being popular, you're kinda stuck supporting quirky compilers -- either yourself, or accepting patches for it.
What are some alternatives?
unordered - Boost.org unordered module
lccc - Lightning Creations Compiler Frontend for various languages
cmake-examples - Useful CMake Examples
documentation-framework - "The Grand Unified Theory of Documentation" (David Laing) - a popular and transformative documentation authoring framework
CPM.cmake - 📦 CMake's missing package manager. A small CMake script for setup-free, cross-platform, reproducible dependency management.
website-v2-docs - Boost Site Documentation
boostdep - A tool to create Boost module dependency reports
miri - An interpreter for Rust's mid-level intermediate representation
Vcpkg - C++ Library Manager for Windows, Linux, and MacOS
smart_ptr - Boost.org smart_ptr module
parallel-hashmap - A family of header-only, very fast and memory-friendly hashmap and btree containers.
boost - My personal boost mirror to be submoduled by my projects