Am 14.10.2014 um 17:30 schrieb eles:
On Tuesday, 14 October 2014 at 14:56:53 UTC, eles wrote:
On Tuesday, 14 October 2014 at 13:52:24 UTC, eles wrote:

http://ask-beta.slashdot.org/story/14/04/30/1344224/c-and-the-stl-12-years-later-what-do-you-think-now


"I've been using it professionally for 15 years now, and if I observe
anything, it's that the longer I use it, the more my stuff looks like C.
I keep shaking my head at younger colleagues mis-using templates all
over the place ("re-usability!", and hour-long compile times, coupled
with really non-obvious implicit conversions and instantiations, never
mind the error messages), and object-oriented hierarchies where each
object is such a tiny part of the system that you need to remember 10
classes at the same time just to have a slight inkling of what this
thing is actually supposed to do."

Actually I prefer,

"I used to love c++ and berade people who used wimp languages like Java. These days I mainly use java, and when I do have to use c++, it feels painfully dated.

At to C++11, while it added some useful stuff, in general it feels like it's just flailing while trying to bring in some of the language features of newer/more modern languages. The new concurrency stuff in particular is just plain unseemly.

Also, a relatively minor but annoying and long-standing problem with doing anything non-trivial in c++ is the lack of consistency between 3rd party libraries. Java has spoiled me into expecting everything to adhere to one convention, but with a c++ project as soon as you've got more than a few external libraries, you end up with a huge mess of code that doesn't mix properly, and writing adapters for everything to get that consistency is just insane.

Long rant short: I'm finding myself using c++ now mainly for:
- small bits of functionality to be used via JNI
- small stuff mainly focused around one library/task (Qt, pqxx, whatever)

Doing anything large and complex with c++ these days just doesn't appeal to me any more. I can build it much faster with java, it'll be more maintainable, and performance wise it's fine for what I do."

It reflects quite clearly my work environment since 2005.

--
Paulo

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