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Modern C++ Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   Modern C++ Programming Cookbook Master Modern C++ with comprehensive solutions for C++23 and all previous standards

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835080542
Length 816 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Marius Bancila Marius Bancila
Author Profile Icon Marius Bancila
Marius Bancila
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Learning Modern Core Language Features 2. Working with Numbers and Strings FREE CHAPTER 3. Exploring Functions 4. Preprocessing and Compilation 5. Standard Library Containers, Algorithms, and Iterators 6. General-Purpose Utilities 7. Working with Files and Streams 8. Leveraging Threading and Concurrency 9. Robustness and Performance 10. Implementing Patterns and Idioms 11. Exploring Testing Frameworks 12. C++ 20 Core Features 13. Other Books You May Enjoy
14. Index

Providing metadata to the compiler with attributes

C++ has been very deficient when it comes to features that enable reflection or introspection on types or data or standard mechanisms to define language extensions. Because of that, compilers have defined their own specific extensions for this purpose. Examples include the VC++ __declspec() specifier or the GCC __attribute__((...)). C++11, however, introduces the concept of attributes, which enable compilers to implement extensions in a standard way or even embedded domain-specific languages. The new C++ standards define several attributes all compilers should implement, and that will be the topic of this recipe.

How to do it...

Use standard attributes to provide hints for the compiler about various design goals such as in the scenarios listed here, but not only these:

  • To ensure that the return value from a function cannot be ignored, declare the function with the [[nodiscard]] attribute. In C++20, you can specify a string literal,...
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