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Expert C++

You're reading from   Expert C++ Become a proficient programmer by learning coding best practices with C++17 and C++20's latest features

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838552657
Length 606 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Vardan Grigoryan Vardan Grigoryan
Author Profile Icon Vardan Grigoryan
Vardan Grigoryan
Shunguang Wu Shunguang Wu
Author Profile Icon Shunguang Wu
Shunguang Wu
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Toc

Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Under the Hood of C++ Programming
2. Introduction to Building C++ Applications FREE CHAPTER 3. Low-Level Programming with C++ 4. Details of Object-Oriented Programming 5. Understanding and Designing Templates 6. Memory Management and Smart Pointers 7. Section 2: Designing Robust and Efficient Applications
8. Digging into Data Structures and Algorithms in STL 9. Functional Programming 10. Concurrency and Multithreading 11. Designing Concurrent Data Structures 12. Designing World-Ready Applications 13. Designing a Strategy Game Using Design Patterns 14. Networking and Security 15. Debugging and Testing 16. Graphical User Interface with Qt 17. Section 3: C++ in the AI World
18. Using C++ in Machine Learning Tasks 19. Implementing a Dialog-Based Search Engine 20. Assessments 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Working with threads

When the C++ program starts, that is, the main() function starts its execution, you can create and launch new threads that will run concurrently to the main thread. To start a thread in C++, you should declare a thread object and pass it the function that you want to run concurrently to the main thread. The following code demonstrates the declaration and starting of a thread using std::thread defined in <thread>:

#include <thread>
#include <iostream>

void foo() { std::cout << "Testing a thread in C++" << std::endl; }

int main()
{
std::thread test_thread{foo};
}

That's it. We can create a better example to show how two threads work concurrently. Let's say we print numbers in a loop concurrently to see which thread prints what:

#include <thread>
#include <iostream>

void print_numbers_in_background()
{
...
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