Sujet : Re: We have a new standard!
De : Muttley (at) *nospam* dastardlyhq.com
Groupes : comp.lang.c++Date : 28. Dec 2024, 11:19:19
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vkojb7$96o6$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
On Fri, 27 Dec 2024 21:51:10 -0500
Sam <
sam@email-scan.com> gabbled:
Stefan Ram writes:
>
According to one web site, C++23 (ISO/IEC 14882:2024) was released
October 19, 2024.
>
(Sorry if it was mentioned here then, and I just did not notice!)
>
Hip-hip-hooray! Finally, finally they addressed the long-standing criticism of C++ being too trivial and too simple, and a kids' language. At last, there's some meat on those bones. Watch out, Java! There's a new boss in town. Real programming languages' specifications are measured in pounds, and not a page count.
Watch out Java? Watch out Perl more like! The title of most write only
language could soon change!
Being serious, I haven't even checked whats new in it but going by C++ 2020
it'll be yet more syntactic soup to support features absolutely no one outside
of ivory tower academic discussions asked for. It'll just add yet more complexity to compilers, hence more potential bugs and make the C++ learning
curve even steeper meaning yet more new programmers abandon it - or don't
even start - for languages such as Python.