A collection of presentation slides and materials from CppCon 2022, covering modern C++ topics, best practices, and advanced techniques.
CppCon/CppCon2022 is a GitHub repository containing the official presentation slides and supplementary materials from the CppCon 2022 conference. It serves as a centralized archive for talks covering modern C++ features, best practices, performance techniques, and real-world application development. The repository helps developers who couldn't attend the conference access valuable educational content from industry experts.
C++ developers of all levels, from beginners learning fundamentals to experts exploring advanced topics like concurrency, metaprogramming, and systems programming. It's particularly valuable for teams adopting modern C++ standards or seeking performance optimization guidance.
This repository provides free, high-quality technical content directly from C++ language contributors and practitioners, offering practical insights often not found in documentation. Unlike fragmented blog posts or commercial training, it delivers comprehensive coverage of current C++ ecosystem developments in one organized location.
Slides and other materials from CppCon 2022
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Includes over 60 presentations from industry leaders like Herb Sutter and Jason Turner, spanning topics from C++20 to embedded systems and concurrency.
Offers actionable advice on API design, dependency management, and performance optimization, as evidenced by talks like 'Back to Basics - API Design' and 'Optimizing Binary Search.'
Covers a wide spectrum from beginner basics to advanced areas like GPU computing and safety-critical guidelines, with materials on package managers and tooling.
Provides slides and code samples from a premier conference at no cost, enabling self-directed learning without commercial barriers.
The repository only contains PDFs and code; video recordings of the talks are absent, limiting engagement for those who learn better through auditory or visual presentations.
Materials are listed without organization by difficulty or topic progression, making it hard for newcomers to find a coherent learning path without external guidance.
Focused on 2022 and C++20, it may not reflect newer standards like C++23 or recent ecosystem updates, requiring supplemental resources for current trends.