Qt
abseil-cpp
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Qt | abseil-cpp | |
---|---|---|
26 | 54 | |
2,273 | 13,917 | |
2.9% | 2.4% | |
10.0 | 9.5 | |
6 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
Qt
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Current Issues With The Qt Project - From The Outside Looking In
Qt mono repo : .. you could check out all submodules and simply use CMake to exactly achieve this. A mono repo also means that if I only use qtbase and declarative, I would need to have all submodules in there? - No
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Why is building a UI in Rust so hard?
For e.g. if you’re writing a framework, you need to interface with Cocoa on MacOS to draw windows, which only provides an Objective C or Swift interface. You can look at the Qt source code and see how they do it: https://github.com/qt/qtbase/tree/067b53864112c084587fa9a507eb4bde3d50a6e1/src/plugins/platforms/cocoa
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Fish (shell) porting to Rust from C++
That's because Qt 6 wholeheartedly converted to CMake for you. (At least it is better than qmake.) In order to support this Qt has this large battery of CMake files [1]. Qt is of course a clear outlier, but you can't expect the same level of support from every other library you want. My points about "anything exotic" still stand.
[1] https://github.com/qt/qtbase/tree/dev/cmake
- A question about how GUI libraries are written.
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A GTK4 Firefox with Libwaita is the next step into the right direction (Please click on the link and upvote my proposal).
What are you talking about? Qt has GTK theme support built-in: https://github.com/qt/qtbase/tree/dev/src/plugins/platformthemes/gtk3
- Ask HN: Why is there no performant remote desktop for Mac/Linux?
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What is this "Portal" which keeps sending notifications when opening the Choose a diskfile window? Is it safe to disable the notifications of it, or will I miss important notifications?
This looks like the Qt bug solved by this commit: https://github.com/qt/qtbase/commit/acaabc9108dfe75530960cf8e3ec4f3602cd82e0
- Where online can I find the Qt6 header files?
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member function definitions should have been like this
Yeah, I'm sure it's completely unheard of. Oh except that it took me all of a couple minutes to find an example of that exact thing in one of the largest, most commonly used C++ frameworks out there.
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Post-mortem of a long-standing bug in video Game Path Of Exile, which was caused by a stale pointer
I don't see any connect in https://github.com/qt/qtbase/blob/dev/src/corelib/tools/qsharedpointer_impl.h, and QPointer isn't a QObject (though I don't know if the latter is actually necessary for signal-slots). One (unreliable) way to test is to see if a QPointer fails to be nulled out when the QObject is blocked by a QSignalBlocker. Alternatively I'd set a data breakpoint on a QPointer and try it out. But I don't have the time right now.
abseil-cpp
- Sane C++ Libraries
- Open source collection of Google's C++ libraries
- Is Ada safer than Rust?
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Appending to an std:string character-by-character: how does the capacity grow?
Yeah, it's nice! And Abseil does it, IFF you use LLVM libc++.
https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/absl/string...
The standard adopted it as resize_and_overwrite. Which I think is a little clunky.
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Shaving 40% Off Google’s B-Tree Implementation with Go Generics
This may be confusing to those familiar with Google's libraries. The baseline is the Go BTree, which I personally never heard of until just now, not the C++ absl::btree_set. The benchmarks aren't directly comparable, but the C++ version also comes with good microbenchmark coverage.
https://github.com/google/btree
https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/absl/contai...
- Faster Sorting Beyond DeepMind’s AlphaDev
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“Once” one-time concurrent initialization with an integer
An implementation of call_once that accommodates callbacks that throw: https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/blob/master/absl/base/c...
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[R] AlphaDev discovers faster sorting algorithms
I wouldn't say it's that cryptic. It's just a few bitwise rotations/shifts/xor operations.
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Deepmind Alphadev: Faster sorting algorithms discovered using deep RL
You can see hashing optimizations as well https://www.deepmind.com/blog/alphadev-discovers-faster-sort..., https://github.com/abseil/abseil-cpp/commit/74eee2aff683cc7d...
I was one of the members who reviewed expertly what has been done both in sorting and hashing. Overall it's more about assembly, finding missed compiler optimizations and balancing between correctness and distribution (in hashing in particular).
It was not revolutionary in a sense it hasn't found completely new approaches but converged to something incomprehensible for humans but relatively good for performance which proves the point that optimal programs are very inhuman.
Note that for instructions in sorting, removing them does not always lead to better performance, for example, instructions can run in parallel and the effect can be less profound. Benchmarks can lie and compiler could do something differently when recompiling the sort3 function which was changed. There was some evidence that the effect can come from the other side.
For hashing it was even funnier, very small strings up to 64 bit already used 3 instructions like add some constant -> multiply 64x64 -> xor upper/lower. For bigger ones the question becomes more complicated, that's why 9-16 was a better spot and it simplified from 2 multiplications to just one and a rotation. Distribution on real workloads was good, it almost passed smhasher and we decided it was good enough to try out in prod. We did not rollback as you can see from abseil :)
But even given all that, it was fascinating to watch how this system was searching and was able to find particular programs can be further simplified. Kudos to everyone involved, it's a great incremental change that can bring more results in the future.
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Backward compatible implementations of newer standards constructs?
Check out https://abseil.io. It offers absl::optional, which is a backport of std::optional.
What are some alternatives?
Boost - Super-project for modularized Boost
Folly - An open-source C++ library developed and used at Facebook.
JUCE - JUCE is an open-source cross-platform C++ application framework for desktop and mobile applications, including VST, VST3, AU, AUv3, LV2 and AAX audio plug-ins.
OpenFrameworks - openFrameworks is a community-developed cross platform toolkit for creative coding in C++.
spdlog - Fast C++ logging library.
Cinder - Cinder is a community-developed, free and open source library for professional-quality creative coding in C++.
EASTL - Obsolete repo, please go to: https://github.com/electronicarts/EASTL
BDE - Basic Development Environment - a set of foundational C++ libraries used at Bloomberg.
Vcpkg - C++ Library Manager for Windows, Linux, and MacOS
MPMCQueue.h - A bounded multi-producer multi-consumer concurrent queue written in C++11