A repository containing slides and materials from the CppCon 2017 conference for C++ developers.
CppCon 2017 is an open repository of presentation slides and materials from the CppCon 2017 conference. It archives talks, tutorials, and demos from C++ experts, covering topics like C++17 features, concurrency, performance, and tooling. The repository serves as a permanent educational resource for the C++ community.
C++ developers of all levels seeking to learn modern C++ practices, conference attendees looking for reference materials, and educators needing quality technical content for training.
It provides free, structured access to expert knowledge from one of the most respected C++ conferences, eliminating paywalls and preserving valuable content that would otherwise be scattered or lost.
Slides and other materials from CppCon 2017
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Contains over 100 presentations from top C++ experts like Herb Sutter and Kate Gregory, providing deep insights into modern C++ practices as listed in the detailed index.
Materials are categorized into Keynotes, Presentations, Tutorials, Demos, Lightning Talks, and Posters, making it easy to navigate specific topics based on the README structure.
Serves as the official repository for CppCon 2017, ensuring long-term, free access to valuable community knowledge without paywalls, as stated in the repository description.
Covers a wide range from C++17 features to concurrency, performance optimization, and real-world case studies, evident in talks like 'C++17 Features' and 'Parallel STL for CPU and GPU'.
Primarily consists of static PDFs and slides with no video or audio, limiting the learning experience compared to full conference recordings that are hosted elsewhere.
Centered on C++17 and 2017-era practices, so it lacks updates on C++20, C++23, and newer compiler/tooling developments, making it less relevant for current projects.
Some entries have READMEs or additional files (e.g., 'Building C++ Modules'), but others are bare PDFs, and code samples may be incomplete or missing, as seen in the repository layout.