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Hands-On Design Patterns with C++

You're reading from   Hands-On Design Patterns with C++ Solve common C++ problems with modern design patterns and build robust applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788832564
Length 512 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Fedor G. Pikus Fedor G. Pikus
Author Profile Icon Fedor G. Pikus
Fedor G. Pikus
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Introduction to Inheritance and Polymorphism FREE CHAPTER 2. Class and Function Templates 3. Memory Ownership 4. Swap - From Simple to Subtle 5. A Comprehensive Look at RAII 6. Understanding Type Erasure 7. SFINAE and Overload Resolution Management 8. The Curiously Recurring Template Pattern 9. Named Arguments and Method Chaining 10. Local Buffer Optimization 11. ScopeGuard 12. Friend Factory 13. Virtual Constructors and Factories 14. The Template Method Pattern and the Non-Virtual Idiom 15. Singleton - A Classic OOP Pattern 16. Policy-Based Design 17. Adapters and Decorators 18. The Visitor Pattern and Multiple Dispatch 19. Assessments 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Resource management in C++

Every program operates on resources and needs to manage them. The most commonly used resource is memory, of course. Hence, you often read about memory management in C++. But really, resources can be just about anything. Many programs exist specifically to manage real, tangible physical resources, or the more ephemeral (but no less valuable) digital ones. Money in bank accounts, airline seats, car parts and assembled cars, or even crates of milk—in today's world, if it is something that needs to be counted and tracked, there is a piece of software somewhere that is doing it. But even in a program that does pure computations, there may be varied and complex resources, unless the program also eschews abstractions and operates at the level of bare numbers. For example, a physics simulation program may have particles as resources.

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