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.
qcoro
- Asynchronous Clean-Up (in Rust)
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Is anyone using coroutines seriously?
Yes, with boost.asio and with a self written Qt Networking Coroutine Library like QCoro.
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Qt Creator 10 Released
You're not completely wrong, but I think this overstating things by a lot. I'll grant you the containers for example, but you can generally use STL algorithms with them. And plenty of old ways of doing things have left modern Qt-based codebases and moved to more modern ways of doing things, including a fair amount of moc macro usage (and yes, you can remove the moc these days, but it has different perf characteristics - cf. the verdigris project).
The community around Qt is pretty active at adopting modern C++, e.g. imho https://github.com/danvratil/qcoro is leading work.
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C++20 coroutines explained simply
I though that with the meager support for coroutines that C++ 20 has, it would take ages till I could use that in Qt, but I discovered that it's actually quite nice with QCoro, which is a 3rd part library that is able to leverage coroutines in Qt's event loop with just an add on. I thought it would require extra facilities in the language/library, plus some large patch to Qt to have the first support of them.
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What is the standard for writing network & database code in C++?
If you want to use coroutines with Qt, QCoro yends to work well: https://qcoro.dvratil.cz/
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Support for co_await in Qt?
Have a look at https://github.com/danvratil/qcoro
cobalt
- Asynchronous Clean-Up (in Rust)
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Second attempt at review of proposed Boost.Async begins
You can read the documentation at https://klemens.dev/async/ and study or try out the code at https://github.com/klemens-morgenstern/async.
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State machines with C++20 coroutines and Asio/Boost Async
Hello all. Being a huge fan of state machine and coroutines, I have been browsing around for examples of what other people do combine these two. I have been using boost-ext/sml for quite many projects and are quite happy about that. But when transitioning to code that relies on coroutines, I would like to write entry/exit/actions/guard methods that uses coroutines and where I can co_await on awaitables from Asio and more recently "Boost Async".
What are some alternatives?
asiochan - Go-like channels for ASIO C++20 coroutines
sml - C++14 State Machine library
QDeferred - Qt C++ alternative for handling async code execution
LibreMines - A Free/Libre and Open Source Software Qt based Minesweeper game available for GNU/Linux, FreeBSD and Windows systems.
Heimer - Heimer is a simple cross-platform mind map, diagram, and note-taking tool written in Qt.
Bouncy-squares-Qt - Desktop application where rectangles move diagonally on the screen and collide
mysql - MySQL C++ client based on Boost.Asio
qspdlog - A simple Qt based widget for visualizing spdlog output.
CoFSM - Finite State Machine using C++20 coroutines with symmetric transfer
rcoro - Custom macro coroutines: copyable, serializable, and with reflection
quickfuture - Using QFuture in QML
Mast - Linux mint configuration tool