C++17 in Detail
Learn the Exciting Features of The New C++ Standard!
C++17 was standardised in December 2017, giving us - developers - a wealth of new features to write better code.
This book describes all significant changes in the language and the Standard Library. Thanks to many practical examples you can quickly apply the knowledge.
The paperback version @Amazon!
And in the bundle with C++ Lambda Story.
About
About the Book
If you’ve ever asked “what’s in C++17 and what does it mean for me and my code?” — and I hope you have — then this book is for you.
Herb Sutter, herbsutter.com
Available also as the paperback version @Amazon and the interactive online course @Educative
C++11 was a major update for the language. With all the modern features like lambdas, constexpr, variadic templates, threading, range-based for loops, smart pointers and many more powerful elements, it was enormous progress for the language. Even now, in 2018, lots of teams struggle to modernise their projects to leverage all the modern features. Later there was a minor update - C++14, which improved some things from the previous standard and added a few smaller elements. With C++17 we got a lot of mixed emotions.
Although C++17 is not as big as C++11, it's larger than C++14. Everyone expected modules, co-routines, concepts and other powerful features, but it wasn't possible to prepare everything on time.
Is C++17 weak?
Far from it! And this book will show you why!
I spent hundreds of hours investigating how the new things work in order to make a nice and practical book for you. The book will not only save your time but also will guide you through all the nuances of the language.
The book brings you exclusive content about C++17 and draws from the experience of many articles that have appeared on bfilipek.com (and cppstories.com). The chapters were rewritten from the ground-up and updated with the latest information. All of that equipped with lots of new examples and practical tips. Additionally, the book provides insight into the current implementation status, compiler support, performance issues and other relevant knowledge to boost your current projects.
If you have experience with C++11/14 and you want to move forward into the latest C++ standard, then this book is for you.
Here are the features you'll learn:
Part One: C++17 Language features
- Fixes and deprecation
- Language clarification
- General language features
- Templates
- Attributes
Part Two: C++17 The Standard Library
- std::optional
- std::variant
- std::any
- std::string_view
- String Conversions
- String Matching & Searchers
- Filesystem
- Parallel STL
- Other Changes
Part Three: More Examples and Use Cases
- Refactoring with std::optional
- Using if constexpr
- Using [[nodiscard]] attribute
- How to parallelise applications
Book Mentions:
"C++17 In Detail" appeared in the Visual C++ Team Blog as suggested books for learning C++17!
Have a look: Books on C++17
Review @CppDepend Blog https://cppdepend.com/blog/?p=1180
Review @A Sawicki Blog: http://asawicki.info/news_1715_book_review_c17_in_detail.html
There's also a book page at Goodreads: C++17 In Detail @Goodreads
Other formats:
- The book is also available in print at Amazon: C++17 in Detail Paperback
- And also as an interactive course at Educative: C++17 in Detail: A Deep Dive
Technical details:
I optimized this book for a PDF reading experience, but other ebook formats should also look good. If you have any issues with the copies, let me know and I'll try to update the formatting.
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The Book
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- Code SamplesC++ Code Samples for the book
Team Edition, 5 Copies (with 50% discount)
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Suggested price$99.95Ideal for your team or a company library!
$49.95
- Code SamplesC++ Code Samples for the book
Author
About the Author
Bartłomiej Filipek
Bartłomiej (Bartek) Filipek is a C++ software developer from the beautiful city of Cracow in Poland He started his professional coding career in 2007. In 2010 he graduated from Jagiellonian University in Cracow, Poland, with a Master's Degree in Computer Science.
Bartek currently works at Xara, where he develops features for advanced document editors. He also has experience with desktop graphics applications, game development, large-scale systems for aviation, writing graphics drivers and even biofeedback. In the past, Bartek has also taught programming (mostly game and graphics programming courses) at local universities in Cracow.
Since 2011 Bartek has been regularly blogging at bfilipek.com and cppstories.com. Initially, the topics revolved around graphics programming, but now the blog focuses on core C++. He's also a co-organiser of the C++ User Group in Cracow. You can hear Bartek in one @CppCast episode where he talks about C++17, blogging and text processing.
Since October 2018, Bartek has been a C++ Expert for the Polish National Body, which works directly with ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22 (C++ Standardisation Committee).
In the same month, Bartek was awarded his first MVP title for the years 2019/2020 by Microsoft.
In his spare time, he loves assembling Lego models with his little son.
See his blog at cppstories.com.
Contents
Table of Contents
About the Author
Technical Reviewer
- Additional Reviewers & Supporters
Revision History
Foreword
Preface
About the Book
- Who This Book is For
- Overall Structure of the Book
- Reader Feedback
- Example Code
- IPart 1 - Language Features
1.Quick Start
2.Removed or Fixed Language Features
- Removed Elements
- Fixes
- Compiler Support
3.Language Clarification
- Stricter Expression Evaluation Order
- Guaranteed Copy Elision
- Dynamic Memory Allocation for Over-Aligned Data
- Exception Specifications in the Type System
- Compiler Support
4.General Language Features
- Structured Binding Declarations
- Init Statement for
ifandswitch - Inline Variables
constexprLambda Expressions- Capturing
[*this]in Lambda Expressions - Nested Namespaces
__has_includePreprocessor Expression- Compiler support
5.Templates
- Template Argument Deduction for Class Templates
- Fold Expressions
if constexpr- Declaring Non-Type Template Parameters With
auto - Other Changes
- Compiler Support
6.Standard Attributes
- Why Do We Need Attributes?
- Before C++11
- Attributes in C++11 and C++14
- C++17 Additions
- Section Summary
- Compiler support
- IIPart 2 - The Standard Library Changes
7.std::optional
- Introduction
std::optionalCreation- Returning
std::optional - Accessing The Stored Value
std::optionalOperations- Performance & Memory Consideration
- Migration from
boost::optional - Special case:
optional<bool>andoptional<T*> - Examples of
std::optional - Summary
- Compiler Support
8.std::variant
- The Basics
std::variantCreation- Changing the Values
- Accessing the Stored Value
- Visitors for
std::variant - Other
std::variantOperations - Exception Safety Guarantees
- Performance & Memory Considerations
- Migration From
boost::variant - Examples of
std::variant - Wrap Up
- Compiler Support
9.std::any
- The Basics
std::anyCreation- Changing the Value
- Accessing The Stored Value
- Performance & Memory Considerations
- Migration from
boost::any - Examples of
std::any - Wrap Up
- Compiler Support
10.std::string_view
- The Basics
- The
std::basic_string_viewType std::string_viewCreation- Other Operations
- Risks Using
string_view - Initializing
stringMembers fromstring_view - Handling Non-Null Terminated Strings
- Performance & Memory Considerations
- Migration from
boost::string_refandboost::string_view - Examples
- Wrap Up
11.String Conversions
- Elementary String Conversions
- Converting From Characters to Numbers:
from_chars - Converting Numbers into Characters:
to_chars - The Benchmark
- Summary
- Compiler support
12.Searchers & String Matching
- Overview of String Matching Algorithms
- New Algorithms Available in C++17
- Examples
- Summary
- Compiler support
13.Filesystem
- Filesystem Overview
- Demo
- The Path Object
- The Directory Entry & Directory Iteration
- Supporting Functions
- Error Handling & File Races
- Examples
- Chapter Summary
- Compiler Support
14.Parallel STL Algorithms
- Introduction
- Overview
- Execution Policies
- Algorithm Update
- New Algorithms
- Performance of Parallel Algorithms
- Examples
- Chapter Summary
- Compiler Support
15.Other Changes In The Library
std::byte- Improvements for Maps and Sets
- Return Type of Emplace Methods
- Sampling Algorithms
- New Mathematical Functions
- Shared Pointers and Arrays
- Non-member
size(),data()andempty() constexprAdditions to the Standard Librarystd::scoped_lock- Polymorphic Allocator,
pmr - Compiler support
16.Removed And Deprecated Library Features
- Removing
auto_ptr - Removed
std::random_shuffle - “Removing Old functional Stuff”
std::iteratorIs Deprecated- Other Smaller Removed or Deprecated Items
- Compiler support
- IIIPart 3 - More Examples and Use Cases
17.Refactoring with std::optional and std::variant
- The Use Case
- The Tuple Version
- A Separate Structure
- With
std::optional - With
std::variant - Wrap up
18.Enforcing Code Contracts With [[nodiscard]]
- Introduction
- Where Can It Be Used?
- How to Ignore
[[nodiscard]] - Before C++17
- Summary
19.Replacing enable_if with if constexpr - Factory with Variable Arguments
- The Problem
- Before C++17
- With
if constexpr - Summary
20.How to Parallelise CSV Reader
- Introduction and Requirements
- The Serial Version
- Using Parallel Algorithms
- Tests
- Wrap up & Discussion
Appendix A - Compiler Support
- GCC
- Clang
- VisualStudio - MSVC
- Compiler Support of C++17 Features
Appendix B - Resources and References
Index
Contributor
About the Contributors
Jacek Galowicz
Jacek Galowicz is a Software Engineer with roughly a decade of professional experience in C++. He got his master of science degree in electrical engineering at RWTH Aachen University in Germany.
Jacek co-founded the Cyberus Technology GmbH in early 2017 and works on products around low-level cybersecurity, virtualization, microkernels, and advanced testing infrastructure. At former jobs, he implemented performance- and security-sensitive microkernel operating systems for Intel x86 virtualization at Intel and FireEye in Germany. In general, he gained experience with kernel driver development, 3D graphics programming, databases, network communication, physics simulation, mostly in C or C++.
In his free time, Jacek maintains a little C++ blog, which has seen some lack of love while he wrote the C++17 STL Cookbook. He is a regular visitor of the C++ Usergroups in Hannover and Braunschweig. In order to do meta programming and generic programming better, he also learned and uses Haskell, which in turn sparked his interest to generally bring the advantages of purely functional programming to C++.
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