"A good programming language is far more than a simple collection of features. My ideal is to provide a set of facilities that smoothly work together to support design and programming styles of a generality beyond my imagination. Here, I briefly outline rules of thumb (guidelines, principles) that are being applied in the design of C++0x. Then, I present the state of the standards process (we are aiming for C++09) and give examples of a few of the proposals such as concepts, generalized initialization, being considered in the ISO C++ standards committee. Since there are far more proposals than could be presented in an hour, I'll take questions." Dr. Bjarne Stroustrup is the original designer and implementer of the C++ Programming Language.
Member since:
2005-07-08
Macros are bad. Global variables are necessary. Pointers are useful (although not always necessary). Range checking is good in all but the most performance-critical code. I'll add that manual memory management is usually (but not always) unnecessary.
C++ does NOT have nice syntax and it's semantics are even worse. Java is nice, C# is a little nicer, but neither compiles very well to native code.
D ftw!