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The C++ Standard Library

You're reading from   The C++ Standard Library What every professional C++ programmer should know about the C++ standard library.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838981129
Length 251 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Rainer Grimm Rainer Grimm
Author Profile Icon Rainer Grimm
Rainer Grimm
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Reader Testimonials FREE CHAPTER Introduction 1. The Standard Library 2. Utilities 3. Interface of All Containers 4. Sequential Containers 5. Associative Container 6. Adaptors for Containers 7. Iterators 8. Callable Units 9. Algorithms 10. Numeric 11. Strings 12. String Views 13. Regular Expressions 14. Input and Output Streams 15. Filesystem library 16. Multithreading Index

C++ versus C++11

Who can characterise C++11 better than Bjarne Stroustrup, creator of C++:

Surprisingly, C++11 feels like a new language: The pieces just fit together better than they used to and I find a higher-level style of programming more natural than before and as efficient as ever. (Bjarne Stroustrup, http://www.stroustrup.com/C++11FAQ.html)

Bjarne Stroustrup is right. C++11 feels like a new language, because it has a lot to offer in addition to classic C++. This is true for the core language and is even more true for the improved and extended standard library. The regular expression library for the manipulation of text, the type-traits library to get, compare or manipulate types, the new random numbers library or the chrono library are all new with C++11. But that’s not all. There are the smart pointers for automatic memory management and the new containers std::array and std::tuple, which are further improved in C++14. C++11 is for the first time aware of multiple...

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