

CppCast
Mathieu Ropert & Jason Turner
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

Jun 10, 2015 • 56min
C++11/14 Library Best Practices
Rob and Jason are joined by Niall Douglas to discuss best practices for C++ 11/14 libraries.
Niall Douglas is a consultant for hire, is one of the authors of proposed Boost.AFIO and is currently the primary Google Summer of Code administrator for Boost. He is an Affiliate Researcher with the Waterloo Research Institute for Complexity and Innovation at the University of Waterloo, Canada, and holds postgraduate qualifications in Business Information Systems and Educational and Social Research as well as a second undergraduate degree double majoring in Economics and Management. He has been using Boost since 2002 and was the ISO SC22 (Programming Languages) mirror convenor for the Republic of Ireland 2011-2012. He formerly worked for BlackBerry 2012-2013 in their Platform Development group, and was formerly the Chief Software Architect of the Fuel and Hydraulic Test Benches of the EuroFighter defence aircraft. He is a published author in the field of Economics and Power Relations, is the Social Media Coordinator for the World Economics Association and his particular interest lies in productivity, the causes of productivity and the organisational scaling constraints which inhibit productivity.
News
constexpr Complete For VS 2015 RTM: C++11 compiler, C++17 STL
C++ in the modern world
Why C++17 is the new programming language for games I want
Niall Douglas
@ned14
Niall Douglas' blog
Links
Best Practice For C++ 11/14 Libraries
Boost.AFIO
Boost.APIBind

Jun 1, 2015 • 49min
Better Code Concurrency
Rob and Jason are joined by Sean Parent to talk about his recent C++Now! talk where he presented a new futures library.
Sean Parent is a principal scientist and software architect for Adobe’s mobile digital imaging group. Sean has been at Adobe since 1993 when he joined as a senior engineer working on Photoshop and later managed Adobe’s Software Technology Lab. In 2009 Sean spent a year at Google working on Chrome OS before returning to Adobe. From 1988 through 1993 Sean worked at Apple, where he was part of the system software team that developed the technologies allowing Apple’s successful transition to PowerPC.
News
Android Studio introduces C++ support in v1.3 preview
C++11 Port of Docopt, a command-line argument parser
Going Native 38 Updates from Lenexa, future of C++17
Announcing C++Now 2016 and Best Session winners
Sean Parent
@seanparent
Sean Parent's Github
Links
STLab Github
C++ Seasoning
Inheritance Is The Base Class of Evil
Sponsors

May 27, 2015 • 43min
Testdriven C++ using Catch
Rob and Jason are joined by Phil Nash to talk about C++ Unit Testing with Catch.
Phil is a semi-independent software developer, coach and consultant - working in as diverse fields as finance, agile coaching and iOS development. A long time C++ developer he also has his feet in C#, F#, Objective-C and Swift - as well as dabbling in other languages. He is the author of several open source projects - most notably Catch: a C++-native test framework.
News
CppCon 2015 Registration Open
Cling Aims to Provide a High Performance C++ REPL
C++Now 2015 Program is online
C++Now 2015 Presentations
C++ Now Youtube Channel
New C++ experimental feature: The tadpole operators
Poll: What C++ Testing Framework do you use?
Phil Nash
@phil_nash
Level of Indirection
Extra Level of Indirection
Links
Catch
MeetingCpp talk on Catch
ISO C++ Standard Discusson on Names
C++ Extension Methods
Sponsors

May 20, 2015 • 36min
Modern C++ for the Windows Runtime
Rob and Jason are joined by Kenny Kerr to talk about Modern C++ for the Windows Runtime. Kenny also shares his thoughts on printf and tells us about his new Pluralsight course.
Kenny Kerr is a computer programmer and recognized expert in Windows operating system development and programming languages. Kenny has published numerous articles about the Windows operating system, network security, and C++ for MSDN Magazine as well as other publications. Microsoft has recognized Kenny’s expertise in network and operating system security with the Microsoft MVP Award for security. He has also held the Microsoft MVP Award since 2007 for his contributions to the C++ development community.
News
Thoughts about C++17 (Bjarne Stroustrup)
C++17 progress update
HPX and the C++ Standard
Kenny Kerr
@kennykerr
Kenny Kerr's Blog
Links
Modern C++ for the Windows Runtime
SQLite with Modern C++ (Free Pluralsight Course)
Kenny Kerr's Pluralsight courses
Sponsors

May 13, 2015 • 41min
Boost 2.0
Rob and Jason are joined by Robert Ramey to talk about the future of the Boost C++ Libraries.
Robert Ramey is a freelance Software Developer living in Santa Barbara, California. His long and varied career spans various aspects of software development including business data processing, product, embedded systems, custom software, and C++ library development. Lately, he has been mostly interested in C++ library design and implementation related to Boost. He is the author and maintainer of the Boost Serialization library and Boost library incubator
News
Boost XP Support
Breaking changes in Visual C++
Examples of Best Practices for C++ 11/14 Libraries
Robert Ramey
Robert Ramey Software Development
Links
Boost 2.0 session at C++Now!
Boost Library Incubator
Sponsors

May 7, 2015 • 55min
SQLpp11
Rob and Jason are joined by Roland Bock to talk about sqlpp11 and some of Rolands ideas for the future of C++
Roland Bock is Head of Development at PPRO Financial Ltd, an FCA regulated e-Money institute offering prepaid MasterCard card programs and comprehensive financial solutions for international electronic payment transactions. Since 2008 he has been using SQL in C++. Being unhappy with the string-based approach of most SQL libraries, he decided to do something about it and developed a type-safe EDSL for SQL in C++: sqlpp11. In his spare time Roland is working on sqlpp11, experimenting with Concepts Lite and trying to write a proposal about compile-time configurable names for C++ standard. He lives and codes in Munich (Germany).
News
C++ 11/14/17 Features in VS 2015RC
C++ 11 Constant Expressions in VS 2015 RC
Resumable Functions in C++
C++ highlights and more of GCC 5.1
Roland Bock
Roland Bock on github
Thoughts by Roland Bock
Links
sqlpp11
Dreaming of Names
ISO C++ Standard Discusson on Names
Sponsors

Apr 22, 2015 • 53min
Asynchronous Programming
Rob and Jason are joined by Hartmut Kaiser to talk about Asynchronous Program and the HPX framework.
Hartmut Kaiser is an Adjunct Professor of Computer Science at Louisiana State University. At the same time, he holds the position of a senior scientist at the Center for Computation and Technology at LSU. He received his doctorate from the Technical University of Chemnitz (Germany) in 1988. He is probably best known through his involvement in open source software projects, mainly as the author of several C++ libraries he has contributed to Boost, which are in use by thousands of developers worldwide. He is a voting member of the ISO C++ Standards Committee and his current research is focused on leading the STE||AR group at CCT working on the practical design and implementation of the ParalleX execution model and related programming methods. In addition, he architected and developed the core library modules of SAGA for C++, a Simple API for Grid Applications.
News
CLion 1.1 roadmap & ACCU 2015
Boost 1.58 a short overview
Module proposal for C++ now at rev 3
Hartmut Kaiser
Hartmut Kaiser
Links
Asynchronous Computation in C++
The STE||AR Group
HPX on Github
Sponsors

Apr 15, 2015 • 39min
Biicode and Turbo
In this episode Manuel Sanchez joins Rob Irving to talk about biicode, the C++ dependency manager and Manuel's Template Metaprogramming Library Turbo.
As a CS undergraduate at the University of Madrid (Spain) and self taught C++ programmer, Manuel Sanchez has been working on personal projects related to Modern C++ during his free time, most of them related to template metaprogramming and his own efforts to give high level features for C++ metaprogramming: The Turbo Metaprogramming Library. Manuel has been working for biicode since September 2014, he assist his fellow biis by dealing with C++ idiosyncrasies while manage very successful posts about template metaprogramming and his work on Turbo.
News
CLion 1.0 has finally arrived
Visual C++ tools for Windows 10 TP
Eric Neibler's Ranges proposal
Poll: Have you tried biicode?
Manuel Sanchez
@Manu343726
Blog and Portfolio
Links
Biicode
Biicode goes open source
Turbo

Apr 10, 2015 • 40min
Quick Game Development
In this episode Vittorio Romeo joins Rob Irving to talk about making simple games with C++ using libraries like SFML, SDL and Cinder.
Vittorio Romeo is an undergraduate Computer Science student at "Università degli Studi di Messina".
Since childhood he has always been interested in programming, and learned to develop applications and games as an autodidact.
After discovering C++ a few years ago, Vittorio became extremely passionate about its evolution and its community.
He currently works on open-source general-purpose C++14 libraries and develops free open-source games.
Vittorio also loves teaching: he manages a well-received C++11/C++14 video tutorial series and he talked about game development in C++ at CppCon 2014.
When he's not in front of a computer, Vittorio enjoys fitness activities (weightlifting, swimming, running) and reading.
News
C++ Samples
C++ 17's STL what do you want it to have
CppCon 2015 Call for Submissions
The C languages merge (April Fools!)
Vittorio Romeo
Personal Website
YouTube Channel
Github
@supahvee1234
Facebook
Links
Quick Game Development with C++ 11/C++14
Open Hexagon
Open Hexagon FB

Apr 2, 2015 • 26min
Fit and Tick
Episode number 6 of CppCast with guest Paul Fultz II recorded April 2, 2015
Paul Fultz II has developed in C++ professionally and personally in a variety of fields including DSP, web development, and desktop applications. He has developed in other languages as well such as Java, C#, Python, and Javascript but focuses most of his attention on C++ which combines correctness, expressiveness, and performance together.
News
Simple Extensible Pattern Matching in C++
C++Now! 2015 Program is available
Simple and Clean Code vs Performance
The C languages merge (April Fools!)
Paul Fultz II
@pfultz2
Paul Fultz II's Blog
Links
Tick - Trait introspection and concept creator for C++11
Fit - Header-only C++11 library that provides utilities for functions and function objects.
Modern Generic Programming using the Tick and Fit libraries


