cpp-core-guidelines-cheatsheet
GSL
cpp-core-guidelines-cheatsheet | GSL | |
---|---|---|
5 | 22 | |
541 | 5,956 | |
- | 1.0% | |
0.0 | 5.9 | |
about 2 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
C++ | ||
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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cpp-core-guidelines-cheatsheet
- Cheatsheet for the C++ Core Guidelines
- Cheatsheet for the C++ core guidelines
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Cheatsheet for the C++ core guidelines (philosophy)
I created a pull request with a WIP markdown version of it. Hopefully it won't be too difficult to copy all of that over in a somewhat understandable format.
- Cheatsheet for the C++ core guidelines – Philosophy [pdf]
GSL
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60 terrible tips for a C++ developer
Already showed you how to use ranges and such above, gsl::final_action is here
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Backward compatible implementations of newer standards constructs?
For span I would recommend the guideline support library - gsl::span
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Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here (20/2023)!
Not sure how things are at this point so you might want to look up with those keywords, but a few years back clang-tidy was one of the suggested tools, or enabling the core guidelines checker in visual studio if you're using that. Maybe using GSL or something similar as well.
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Hardening C++ with Bjarne Stroustrup
When I want safety guarantees, I use the original and run-time checked gsl::span, rather than std::span. https://github.com/microsoft/GSL .
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I love building a startup in Rust. I wouldn't pick it again.
Another solution: use std::span (or some alternative implementations if the codebase doesn't use C++20).
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C++23 “Pandemic Edition” is complete
If you ask me, the GSL [1] alone is a fairly radical departure from C++ that delivers a lot of safety. I don't know if it's gotten much popularity, though. Probably because it introduces a similar disruption like you might find from a brand new programming language.
[1] https://github.com/microsoft/GSL
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Using Rust at a startup: A cautionary tale
> With Rust, though, one needs to learn entirely new ideas — things like lifetimes, ownership, and the borrow checker. These are not familiar concepts to most people working in other common languages ... Some of those “new” ideas are, of course, present in other languages — especially functional ones.
With C++, lifetime and ownership are just about as important but unfortunately no one's got your back. You can ignore lifetimes and ownership but you do so at your own peril. And the compiler won't tell you you're doing it wrong because the language wasn't designed for it to do so.
If you want a taste of rust's "mindset" (with respect to limitations imposed by some types) without jumping ship to a new language, try C++'s Guidelines Support Library [1]. It introduces some of the same benefits/friction as switching to rust but without a new language. Opting-in to some of these guidelines might be a gentler way to get some of the benefits of Rust. But it comes with a similarly higher bar.
[1] https://github.com/microsoft/GSL
- Passing a std:: array as a function parameter
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I created a memory leak using smart pointers
It's also far more verbose than T* or T& (probably intentionally). If you really want a non-nullable pointer, gsl::not_null from the GSL is a good option. Writing your own version is also trivial, if you don't want to add a dependency.
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I wanna go back to work at a car assembly plant
I instead use the GSL and the Core Guidelines, where
What are some alternatives?
mp-units - The quantities and units library for C++
CppCoreGuidelines - The C++ Core Guidelines are a set of tried-and-true guidelines, rules, and best practices about coding in C++
cppinsights - C++ Insights - See your source code with the eyes of a compiler
sentry-native - Sentry SDK for C, C++ and native applications.
C-Golang-like-Defer - Cursed defer() method in C++ achieves similar results as Go's defer keyword.
score-simple-api-2
C-Python-like-Decorators - How to write decorator functions in modern C++
CppCon2018 - Slides and other materials from CppCon 2018
boost - My personal boost mirror to be submoduled by my projects
span-lite - span lite - A C++20-like span for C++98, C++11 and later in a single-file header-only library
optional - C++11/14/17 std::optional with functional-style extensions and reference support
abseil-cpp - Abseil Common Libraries (C++)