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Advanced C++

You're reading from   Advanced C++ Master the technique of confidently writing robust C++ code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781838821135
Length 762 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (5):
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Olena Lizina Olena Lizina
Author Profile Icon Olena Lizina
Olena Lizina
Rakesh Mane Rakesh Mane
Author Profile Icon Rakesh Mane
Rakesh Mane
Gazihan Alankus Gazihan Alankus
Author Profile Icon Gazihan Alankus
Gazihan Alankus
Brian Price Brian Price
Author Profile Icon Brian Price
Brian Price
Vivek Nagarajan Vivek Nagarajan
Author Profile Icon Vivek Nagarajan
Vivek Nagarajan
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

About the Book 1. Anatomy of Portable C++ Software 2A. No Ducks Allowed – Types and Deduction FREE CHAPTER 2B. No Ducks Allowed – Templates and Deduction 3. No Leaks Allowed - Exceptions and Resources 4. Separation of Concerns - Software Architecture, Functions, and Variadic Templates 5. The Philosophers' Dinner – Threads and Concurrency 6. Streams and I/O 7. Everybody Falls, It's How You Get Back Up – Testing and Debugging 8. Need for Speed – Performance and Optimization 1. Appendix

Further Optimizations

Several other techniques exist that can be implemented as you code; some of them are not guaranteed to produce better code, but it takes very little effort to change your coding habits to do these reflexively. They cost nothing but may result in gains. A few of these techniques are as follows:

  • Pass parameters that are not primitive types by const reference when possible. Even though move constructors can make copying inexpensive, they still involve more overhead than using a const reference.
  • Use pre-increment (++i) or pre-decrement (--i) operators rather than the postfix versions. This usually has no utility for simple types such as integers but may do so for complex types with a custom increment operator. Getting into a habit of writing ++i rather than i++ is good practice unless post-increment is actually the desired behavior. Apart from performance benefits, such code declares the intent more clearly by using the right operator.
  • Declare variables as...
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