Book Image

Modern C++ Programming Cookbook - Third Edition

By : Marius Bancila
Book Image

Modern C++ Programming Cookbook - Third Edition

By: Marius Bancila

Overview of this book

The updated third edition of Modern C++ Programming Cookbook addresses the latest features of C++23, such as the stack library, the expected and mdspan types, span buffers, formatting library improvements, and updates to the ranges library. It also gets into more C++20 topics not previously covered, such as sync output streams and source_location. The book is organized in the form of practical recipes covering a wide range of real-world problems. It gets into the details of all the core concepts of modern C++ programming, such as functions and classes, iterators and algorithms, streams and the file system, threading and concurrency, smart pointers and move semantics, and many others. You will cover the performance aspects of programming in depth, and learning to write fast and lean code with the help of best practices. You will explore useful patterns and the implementation of many idioms, including pimpl, named parameter, attorney-client, and the factory pattern. A chapter dedicated to unit testing introduces you to three of the most widely used libraries for C++: Boost.Test, Google Test, and Catch2. By the end of this modern C++ programming book, you will be able to effectively leverage the features and techniques of C++11/14/17/20/23 programming to enhance the performance, scalability, and efficiency of your applications.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
13
Other Books You May Enjoy
14
Index

Conditionally compiling classes and functions with enable_if

Template metaprogramming is a powerful feature of C++ that enables us to write generic classes and functions that work with any type. This is a problem sometimes because the language does not define any mechanism for specifying constraints on the types that can be substituted for the template parameters. However, we can still achieve this using metaprogramming tricks and by leveraging a rule called substitution failure is not an error, also known as SFINAE. This rule determines whether the compiler discards, from the overloaded set, a specialization when substituting the explicitly specified or deduced type for the template parameter when it fails, instead of generating an error. This recipe will focus on implementing type constraints for templates.

Getting ready

Developers have used a class template usually called enable_if for many years in conjunction with SFINAE to implement constraints on template types. The enable_if...