On September 4-6, the 2013 edition of
GoingNative will take place, and I'll be giving the following presentation:
An Effective C++11/14 Sampler
After years of intensive study (first of C++0x, then of C++11, and
most recently of C++14), Scott thinks he finally has a clue. About the
effective use of C++11, that is (including C++14 revisions). At last
year’s GoingNative, Herb Sutter predicted that Scott would produce a
new version of Effective C++ in the 2013-14 time frame, and Scott’s
working on proving him almost right. Rather than revise Effective C++,
Scott decided to write a new book that focuses exclusively on C++11/14:
on the things the experts almost always do (or almost always avoid
doing) to produce clear, efficient, effective code. In this
presentation, Scott will present a taste of the Items he expects to
include in Effective C++11/14. If all goes as planned, he’ll also
solicit your help in choosing a cover for the book.
Like all the talks at
GoingNative, mine will be live-streamed as well as recorded for later viewing. But it occurred to me a while ago that although my web site has a list of my
past publications and my
past presentations, it doesn't really have a list of videos of presentations I've given. Well, it didn't. It does now: check out my brand spanking new
online videos page. If the thought of such a page moves you to nominate me for the Personal Vanity Hall of Shame, I understand, but my actual motivation was considerably more pedestrian. It's not uncommon for me to be asked whether my presentations are available online, and now there's an easy way for people to answer that question themselves.
Which reminds me. I presented my seminar,
Better Software—No Matter What, at the
Norwegian Developers Conference in June, and most of that talk has now been made available online. The original plan was for the entire thing to be recorded, but there was a technical glitch that prevented the first of six parts from being preserved. Parts 2-5 are now live, and when the NDC tells me where part 6 is, I'll add a link to that, too.
Scott
PS - Speaking of
Effective C++11/14, just today I finished my first full draft of the chapter on rvalue references, move semantics, and perfect forwarding.
It consists of eight Items and, if Microsoft Word is to be believed,
20,359 words. Assuming 90K words for the full book (in line with my past
efforts, if FrameMaker is to be believed), that means I'm a bit over
20% of the way towards a full draft.