BDE
etl
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BDE | etl | |
---|---|---|
7 | 55 | |
1,611 | 1,949 | |
1.5% | 2.4% | |
9.5 | 9.2 | |
3 days ago | 4 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
BDE
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A Modern High-Performance Open Source Message Queuing System
Hi, one of the authors here. BlazingMQ depends on two other open source C++ libraries: https://github.com/bloomberg/bde and https://github.com/bloomberg/ntf-core. I believe documentation writer wanted to highlight that BlazingMQ does not depend on frameworks like ZooKeeper, etc.
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Announcing YOMM2 version 1.3.1
It would be easy to make the runtime use polymorphic allocators, one for the temporary objects created by update_methods, and another for the hash and dispatch tables. The first allocator could use the stack (like this), and the second a block in the BSS segment.
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Bloomberg finally opensourced memray —a new versatile memory profile for Python
I'm pretty sure they use C++ very extensively. They have their own C++ standard library for example. I'm not aware of them using FORTRAN or C. Do you have a reference for that?
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What language best suits for fintech products and services?
No first-hand experience, but C++ is definitely a player. Check out John Lakos and bloomberg/bde. He was a force behind the improved allocators in C++11 and beyond. That repo I linked is a beast of a codebase (:
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Eastl: An Alternative C++ Standard Library from Electronic Arts
Specifying your own allocator is like a main feature of bde from Bloomberg:
https://github.com/bloomberg/bde
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Bloomberg London
If I remember correctly, BDE ( https://github.com/bloomberg/bde ) is developed in London's office and definitely the team that works on it is one of the most experienced in the company.
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pmr allocators in Xcode / AppleClang
Libc++ hasn't implemented polymorphic containers and similar. You could take a look at what inspired PMR: https://github.com/bloomberg/bde/
etl
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Modern C++ Programming Course
If you can't use the STL because of exceptions: https://www.etlcpp.com/
- How many of you do you actually use C++?
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Undefined Behavior?
You can also use ETL (https://www.etlcpp.com)
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As an embedded programmer which parts of C++ should I focus?
Use ETL for embedded standard library functionality: https://www.etlcpp.com/
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C++ on embedded studio
The best choice here is use embedded Template Library: https://www.etlcpp.com/
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C++20 for bare-metal microcontroller programming
If you can't get C++23, expected it's implemented in the ETL (it's also just a really amazing library for this kind of stuff - highly recommend!).
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Recompile C++ Standard library to only include classes that are embedded system friendly
I want to use some of C++ std library classes/functions in my embedded system library project that I'm writing. However as the environment has limited ressources I don't want to have use or expose classes or functions that do the following: * Dynamic memory allocations * RTTI * Runtime exceptions I will be rewriting some basic container and algorithms according to my needs. I know that there are other re writes of STL like ESTL but I don't want to have any external dependencies So my question is can I somehow compile/package a fork of C++ std library that only include embedded systems friendly classes such as: - array - tuple - variant - type_traits Etc This compiled library must be completely standalone. The compiler that I use can support upto C++17 standard.
- Looking for well written, modern C++ (17/20) example projects for microcontrollers
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What are some essential libraries for embedded systems everyone should learn?
I will never not recommend the Embedded Template Library
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What programming language should I pick up as a senior developer ?
STL containers use dynamic memory allocation which is often a no-no in embedded contexts. there is the ETL https://www.etlcpp.com/ but I haven't used it!
What are some alternatives?
abseil-cpp - Abseil Common Libraries (C++)
EA Standard Template Library - EASTL stands for Electronic Arts Standard Template Library. It is an extensive and robust implementation that has an emphasis on high performance.
Boost - Super-project for modularized Boost
graphMat - A matrix header-only library, uses graphs internally, helpful when your matrix is part of a simulation where it needs to grow many times (or auto expand)
Qt - Qt Base (Core, Gui, Widgets, Network, ...)
ordered-map - C++ hash map and hash set which preserve the order of insertion
Folly - An open-source C++ library developed and used at Facebook.
libsrt - libsrt is a C library for writing fast and safe C code, faster. It provides string, vector, bit set, set, map, hash set, and hash map handling. Suitable for soft and hard real-time. Allows both heap and stack allocation. *BETA* (API still can change: suggestions are welcome)
MiLi
RxCpp - Reactive Extensions for C++
ffead-cpp - Framework for Enterprise Application Development in c++, HTTP1/HTTP2/HTTP3 compliant, Supports multiple server backends
Ygg - An intrusive C++17 implementation of a Red-Black-Tree, a Weight Balanced Tree, a Dynamic Segment Tree and much more!