

CppCast
Phil Nash & Timur Doumler
Once a month, Jason sits down with guests from the C++ community to discuss the latest news and what they have been up to. Find us at cppcast.com
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 9, 2016 • 42min
HPC and more
Rob and Jason are joined by Bryce Lelbach to discuss High Performance Computing and other C++ topics.
Bryce Adelstein Lelbach is a researcher at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), a US Department of Energy research facility. Working alongside a team of mathematicians and physicists, he develops and analyzes new parallel programming models for exascale and post-Moore architectures. Bryce is one of the developers of the HPX C++ runtime system; he spent five years working on HPX while he was at Louisiana State University's Center for Computation and Technology. He also helped start the LLVMLinux initiative, and has occasionally contributed to the Boost C++ libraries. Bryce is an organizer for C++Now and CppCon conferences and he is passionate about C++ community development. He serves as LBNL's representative to the C++ standards committee.
News
Can I always depend on return value optimization
Compilers and error messages
Results of the 2015 Underhanded C Contest
Bryce Lelbach
Bryce Lelbach
Links
Lawrence Berkeley National Lab
HPX on GitHub
Benchmarking C++ Code @ CppCon 2015
Practical Functional Programming in C++ @ CppCon 2014

Jan 28, 2016 • 45min
Compiler Explorer
Rob and Jason are joined by Matt Godbolt to discuss the online Compiler Explorer project.
Matt is a developer at trading firm DRW. Before that he's worked at Google, run a C++ tools company, and spent over a decade in the games industry making PC and console games. He is fascinated by performance and created GCC Explorer, to help understand how C++ code ends up looking to the processor. When not performance tuning C++ code he enjoys writing emulators for 8-bit computers in Javascript.
News
Microsoft releases CNTK, its open source deep learning toolkit
C++ Language Support for Pattern Matching and Variants
VS2015 Update 2's STL is C++17 Feature Complete
C++Now 2016 Submission Deadline
Matt Godbolt
@mattgodbolt
Matt Godbolt's blog
Links
Compiler Explorer
x86 Internals for Fun & Profit

Jan 21, 2016 • 31min
Intel Tamper Protection
Rob and Jason are joined by Marc Valle to discuss Intel's Tamper Protection Toolkit which can be used to protect your C++ application from reverse engineering and tampering.
Marc Valle is the technical lead for the Intel (R) Tamper Protection
Toolkit. His professional interests include tamper protection,
reverse engineering, compilers, security, and privacy. In his free
time he can be found staring at the black line at the bottom of the
pool preparing for his next competition.
News
Compilers targeting C
Lambdas are dangerous?
VS 2015 Update 1 New Experimental Feature MPX
Links
Intel Tamper Protection Toolkit
Intel Tamper Protection Toolkit Getting Started

Jan 14, 2016 • 44min
Game Development with C++ and Javascript
Rob and Jason are joined by Mark Logan to discuss his experience building a game engine in Javascript and C++.
Mark started learning C++ with Borland Turbo C++ in high school, so that he could build video games. After 20 years, he's finally starting to feel like he knows what he's doing. After graduating from Northeastern University's College of Computer Science, Mark spent 7 years at Google, mainly working on internal infrastructure and automation. More recently, he returned to his first love - game programming - and helped found a studio called Artillery. He's currently the tech lead on Artillery's free-to-play RTS, code-named Atlas. He spends his time working on performance optimization, networking, and solving cross-platform development problems.
News
New cppcheck released
How to make your own C++ static analyzer with clang
Improving your build times with Incredibuild and VS 2015
Mark Logan
@technicaldebtor
Links
Artillery
Artillery Blog

Jan 8, 2016 • 47min
UndoDB and Live Recorder
Rob and Jason are joined by Dr. Greg Law to discuss reverse debugging with Undo Software.
Dr Greg Law is co-founder and CEO at Undo Software. He has spent nearly 20 years writing systems-level code, including novel kernel designs and networking architectures in academia and at a variety of start-ups. Greg finds it particularly rewarding to turn innovative software technology into “real” business development. He still gets to write some code, although sadly most of his coding these days is done on aeroplanes. Greg lives in Cambridge, England with his wife and two children.
News
C++ Status at the end of 2015
Starting a tech startup with C++
} // good to go
C++Now 2016 Call for Submission
Dr. Greg Law
@gregthelaw
Greg Law's posts on Undo Software's Blog
Links
Undo Software
Jason's photos from Kenya

Dec 23, 2015 • 39min
Transducers
Rob and Jason are joined by Juan Pedro Bolivar Puente to discuss Transducers and the Atria library.
Juanpe is a Spanish software engineer currently based in Berlin, Germany. Since 2011 he has worked for Ableton, where he has helped building novel musical platforms like Push and Live and where he coordinates the "Open Source Guild" helping the adoption and contribution to FLOSS. He is most experienced in C++ and Python and likes tinkering with languages like Haskell or Clojure. He is an advocate for "modern C++" and pushes for adoption of declarative and functional paradigms in the programming mainstream. He is also an open source activist and maintainer of a couple of official GNU packages like Psychosynth which introduces new realtime audio processing techniques leveraging the newest C++ standards.
News
Going Large Scale with C++ Part 1
Support for Android CMake projects in Visual Studio
Juan Pedro Bolivar Puente
Juan's website
Links
CppCon 2015: Juan Pedro Bolívar Puente “Transducers: from Clojure to C++"
Atria on GitHub
psychosynth
Embracing Conway's law
Victor Laskin's Blog: C++14 Transducers

Dec 17, 2015 • 43min
Mesonbuild
Rob and Jason are joined by Jussi Pakkanen to discuss the Mesonbuild multiplatform build system for C++.
Jussi Pakkanen got his doctoral degree in computer science from the Helsinki University of Technology in 2006. Since then he has worked on various problem areas ranging from mail sorting to the software stacks of Ubuntu desktop and phone. Most recently he was the SDK lead developer at Jolla. Currently he is open for new development challenges. During his spare time he has been known to be a photographer, movie director, magician, gastronomist, computer game designer and watercolour painter.
News
Under the Hood: Leap Motion Hackathon's AR Workspace
STL Fixes in VS 2015 Update 1
Meeting C++ Lightning talks are now on youtube
Jussi Pakkanen
Jussi Pakkanen's blog
@jpakkane
Links
Mesonbuild
Mesonbuild on GitHub
Making build systems not suck

Dec 8, 2015 • 45min
Ranges
Rob and Jason are joined by Eric Niebler to discuss his work on Ranges and the future of the Standard Library.
Eric Niebler is an independent consultant specializing in C++ library development. Currently, he is working on modernizing the C++ standard library and adding support for ranges, funded by the first-ever grant from the Standard C++ Foundation. Previously, Eric was a consultant for BoostPro computing, a member of Microsoft's Visual C++ team, and a Microsoft Researcher before that. In addition, he has several libraries in Boost and is a Boost release manager and steering committee member. Eric has been an active member of the C++ Standardization Committee for well over 10 years. He speaks regularly at C++ conferences around the world.
In a previous life, Eric drifted with no fixed address, writing C++ and blog entries from cafes and beaches around the world. Today, Eric is a family man living and working in the glorious Pacific Northwest near Seattle.
News
Clang with Microsoft CodeGen in VS 2015 Update 1
Conan a C/C++ package manager
Getting started with Modules in C++
Eric Niebler
@ericniebler
Eric Niebler's blog
Links
Range v3 Library
C++ Extensions for Ranges
CppCon 2015: Eric Niebler "Ranges for the Standard Library"

Dec 2, 2015 • 43min
rr
Rob and Jason are joined by Robert O'Callahan from Mozilla to discuss the RR project.
Robert O'Callahan has a PhD in computer science at Carnegie Mellon and did academic research for a while at IBM Research, working on dynamic program analysis tools. At the same time he was contributing to Mozilla as a volunteer, until he switched gears to work full-time with Mozilla; Robert has been working on what became Firefox for over 15 years, mostly on layout and rendering in the browser engine and on related Web standards like CSS and DOM APIs. Lately he's been devoting about half of his time to rr.
News
Breaking all the Eggs in C++
The wind of change
Celebrating 30th anniversary of the first C++ compiler: let's find bugs in it
Robert O'Callahan
Robert O'Callahan's website
@rocallahan
Links
rr project
Mozilla on GitHub

Nov 19, 2015 • 57min
CppCon Wrapup
Rob and Jason are joined by Jon Kalb to talk about this year's CppCon, his trip to the Kona standards committee meeting and much more.
Jon has been writing C++ for two and half decades and does onsite C++ training. He chairs the CppCon and C++Now conferences and the C++ Track for the Silicon Valley Code Camp. He serves as chair of the Boost Libraries Steering Committee and is a Microsoft MVP.
News
Using variadic templates cleanly
A sad story about get_temporary_buffer
C++ and zombies: a moving question
Jon Kalb
@_jonkalb
Exception-Safe Coding in C++
Links
CppCon 2016: Announcing 2016 Dates
CppCon 2014: Exception Safe Code (Part 1)


