cmeerw@programming.dev to C++@programming.devEnglish · edit-23 days agoThe empire of C++ strikes back with Safe C++ blueprintwww.theregister.comexternal-linkmessage-square35fedilinkarrow-up136arrow-down12
arrow-up134arrow-down1external-linkThe empire of C++ strikes back with Safe C++ blueprintwww.theregister.comcmeerw@programming.dev to C++@programming.devEnglish · edit-23 days agomessage-square35fedilink
minus-squareFalconMirage@jlai.lulinkfedilinkarrow-up1arrow-down1·16 hours agoYou don’t have to use unsafe C++ functions either C++ is technically safe if you follow best practices The issue, to me, is that people learn older versions of the language first, and aren’t aware of the better ways of doing stuff. IMO people should learn the latest C++ version first, and only look at the older types of implementation when they come across them
minus-squareFizzyOrange@programming.devlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·9 hours ago C++ is technically safe if you follow best practices Yeah but it’s virtually impossible to reliably follow best practices. The compiler won’t tell you when you’re invoking UB and there is a lot of potential UB in C++. So in practice it is not at all safe.
minus-squareFalconMirage@jlai.lulinkfedilinkarrow-up1·5 hours agoI agree I was only adding my opinion (that people should try to always use the latest version of C++, which is inherently safer, but still not 100% safe)
You don’t have to use unsafe C++ functions either
C++ is technically safe if you follow best practices
The issue, to me, is that people learn older versions of the language first, and aren’t aware of the better ways of doing stuff.
IMO people should learn the latest C++ version first, and only look at the older types of implementation when they come across them
Yeah but it’s virtually impossible to reliably follow best practices. The compiler won’t tell you when you’re invoking UB and there is a lot of potential UB in C++.
So in practice it is not at all safe.
I agree
I was only adding my opinion (that people should try to always use the latest version of C++, which is inherently safer, but still not 100% safe)