Book Image

Modern C++: Efficient and Scalable Application Development

By : Richard Grimes, Marius Bancila
Book Image

Modern C++: Efficient and Scalable Application Development

By: Richard Grimes, Marius Bancila

Overview of this book

C++ is one of the most widely used programming languages. It is fast, flexible, and used to solve many programming problems. This Learning Path gives you an in-depth and hands-on experience of working with C++, using the latest recipes and understanding most recent developments. You will explore C++ programming constructs by learning about language structures, functions, and classes, which will help you identify the execution flow through code. You will also understand the importance of the C++ standard library as well as memory allocation for writing better and faster programs. Modern C++: Efficient and Scalable Application Development deals with the challenges faced with advanced C++ programming. You will work through advanced topics such as multithreading, networking, concurrency, lambda expressions, and many more recipes. By the end of this Learning Path, you will have all the skills to become a master C++ programmer. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: • Beginning C++ Programming by Richard Grimes • Modern C++ Programming Cookbook by Marius Bancila • The Modern C++ Challenge by Marius Bancila
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
12
Math Problems
13
Language Features
14
Strings and Regular Expressions
15
Streams and Filesystems
16
Date and Time
17
Algorithms and Data Structures
Index

Using classes


The Resource Acquisition Is Initialization technique is useful for managing resources provided by other libraries, such as the C Runtime Library or the Windows SDK. It simplifies your code because you do not have to think about where a resource handle will go out of scope and provide clean-up code at every point. If the clean-up code is complicated, it is typical in C code to see it put at the end of a function and every exit point in the function will have a goto jump to that code. This results in messy code. In this example, we will wrap the C files functions with a class, so that the lifetime of the file handle is maintained automatically.

The C runtime _findfirst and _findnext functions allow you to search for a file or directory that matches a pattern (including wildcard symbols). The _findfirst function returns an intptr_t, which is relevant to just that search and this is passed to the _findnext function to get subsequent values. This intptr_t is an opaque pointer to...