A collection of presentation materials from the C++Now 2014 conference covering modern C++ topics, libraries, and best practices.
C++Now 2014 Presentations is an archive of all presentation materials from the C++Now 2014 conference. It contains slides, PDFs, and code examples from talks covering advanced C++ topics like metaprogramming, concurrency, library design, and modern C++11/14 features. The repository serves as a comprehensive learning resource for C++ developers interested in expert-level techniques and historical context.
Intermediate to advanced C++ developers, library authors, and educators seeking in-depth material on modern C++ practices and conference presentations from 2014.
Provides free, organized access to high-quality conference presentations that would otherwise be difficult to find, offering both educational value and historical insight into the C++ community's evolution during the C++11/14 transition.
Presentation materials presented at C++Now 2014
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Includes over 50 talks from five conference days, covering advanced topics like metaprogramming and concurrency, as listed in the detailed README with links to PDFs and code.
Features presentations from C++ experts on niche areas such as 'Coroutines, Fibers, and Threads' and 'Understanding &&', providing deep technical knowledge from the 2014 ecosystem.
Many talks include accompanying source code, like the Test-Driven Development presentation with a dedicated code folder, enabling hands-on learning and experimentation.
Offers open access to conference materials that are typically paid or hard to find, supporting self-education in advanced C++ without cost barriers.
Focuses solely on C++11/14, missing modern features from C++17, C++20, and later standards, which limits its direct applicability to current projects.
Uses a mix of PDFs, PPTX, OPD, and Keynote files, as seen in the README links, requiring multiple software tools to view all content, which can be cumbersome.
The repository is a snapshot from 2014 with no updates or fixes, so external links may break and content won't reflect recent C++ developments or community feedback.