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draft | OS.js | |
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24 | 24 | |
5,523 | 6,757 | |
1.0% | 0.9% | |
9.6 | 0.0 | |
2 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
TeX | JavaScript | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
draft
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C++23: The Next C++ Standard
I should have said the "latest standard", not "spec", if we're being technical. But EVERY bit of official material is very clear about asserting that C++23 is still a preview/in-progress, not a standard. Saying otherwise is, strictly speaking, incorrect.
https://isocpp.org/std/the-standard
https://www.iso.org/standard/79358.html
https://github.com/cplusplus/draft/blob/main/papers/n4951.md
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Never trust a programmer who says they know C++
[3] https://github.com/cplusplus/draft/releases/tag/n4917
*This is a joke, but only barely so.
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How to become a C++ Chad ?
pdf
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Why is the token "designator brace-or-equal-initializer" not defined in the C++ 20 standard document?
I'm currently going through Annex A of C++20, but I can't find the definition of "designator brace-or-equal-initializer", and couldn't find much formal information on it in an obvious way. The newest source on [decl] (https://github.com/cplusplus/draft/blob/main/source/declarations.tex) also doesn't seem to have it. Am I missing anything, or is this a missing definition in the standard grammar?
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Can sanitizers find the two bugs I wrote in C++?
> I don't have a copy of the standard at hand, can anyone quote the relevant section?
The C++ (draft) standard is on GitHub! [0] Compiling it needs Perl and some LaTeX packages, but is reasonably straightforwards otherwise. In addition, links to specific draft standards can be found on cppreference [1].
But anyways, in the first C++20 post-publication draft (N4868), the wording you're interested in is in multiple sections. Section 22.2.3 Sequence Containers [sequence.reqmts] has Table 78: Optional sequence container operations [tab:container.seq.opt] (starting on page 815), which states that a precondition of pop_back() is that empty() returns false. Section 16.3.2.4 Detailed Specifications [structure.specifications] (page 481) states:
> Preconditions: the conditions that the function assumes to hold whenever it is called; violation of any preconditions results in undefined behavior.
Therefore, calling pop_back() on an empty vector results in undefined behavior.
> Is this something that in practice is implemented in different (exception-throwing) ways?
Based on a quick glance at the major implementations (libc++ 15.0.7 at [2], MSVC at [3], libstdc++ at [4]), it looks like asserts are used. Whether those result in exceptions probably depends on whether the asserts are compiled in in the first place and how they are implemented, but it's definitely not a guaranteed exception.
[0]: https://github.com/cplusplus/draft
[1]: https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/links
[2]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/llvmorg-15.0.7/lib...
[3]: https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/8dfdcc7b7bf66834a7...
[4]: https://gcc.gnu.org/git/?p=gcc.git;a=blob;f=libstdc%2B%2B-v3...
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How does Rust handle bounds checks that are incorrect in C/C++ due to signed integer conversion?
Which standard specifically are you quoting there? I checked an old and a new C++ draft in https://github.com/cplusplus/draft/tree/main/papers, and in neither one did 6.3 have anything like that.
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Rust and C++
https://github.com/cplusplus/draft/releases/download/n4917/n4917.pdf (page 1, chapter 1 scope):
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WG21, aka C++ Standard Committee, October 2022 Mailing
PRs for C++ are at https://github.com/cplusplus/draft But the discussion for a PR is via https://isocpp.org/std/submit-a-proposal
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My programming language history
C/C++
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How to overload function parameter to accept either raw pointer or c-array
By the way, https://github.com/cplusplus/draft/releases/tag/n4910 , says
OS.js
- Os.js – open-source JavaScript web desktop platform with a window manager
- Show HN: PikaTorrent, a modern, multi-platform, open source BitTorrent app
- Os.js
- Why even have other programming languages?
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Cloud Based Desktop Environment
OS.js
- Why can't there be one ubiquitous programming language that 'does everything' if the underlying principles of coding is all the same?
- Let's write Operating System in JavaScript
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What did I do to deserve a JavaScript database?
You mean like https://www.os-js.org/ there are a few others also I believe.
What are some alternatives?
team - Rust teams structure
oneye
LLVMSharp - LLVM bindings for .NET Standard written in C# using ClangSharp
Guacamole - The Guacamole project is now Apache Guacamole (http://guacamole.apache.org/). This repository has been repurposed as the base for the Apache Guacamole packages built for Glyptodon Enterprise.
papers
GateOne - Gate One is an HTML5-powered terminal emulator and SSH client
Asciidoctor - :gem: A fast, open source text processor and publishing toolchain, written in Ruby, for converting AsciiDoc content to HTML 5, DocBook 5, and other formats.
greenworks - a node.js plugin to integrate nw.js/electron games with steamworks
cppwp - HTML version of the current C++ working paper
puter - 🌐 The Internet OS! Free, Open-Source, and Self-Hostable.
libhal - A collection of interfaces and abstractions for embedded peripherals and devices using modern C++
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.