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LLVM's Libc++ Now Has C++1Y Standard Library Support

An anonymous reader writes "LLVM's libc++ standard library (an alternative to GNU libstdc++) now has full support for C++1y, which is expected to become C++14 next year. Code merged this week implements the full C++1y standard library, with support for new language features in the Clang compiler frontend nearly complete." GCC has some support for the soon-to-be standard too. The C++ standards committee is expected to produce a more or less final draft in just a few weeks. The LLVM and GCC C++14 status pages both have links to the proposals for the new features.

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  1. Re:GNU excitement by Sectrish · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Now that Clang/LLVM has got this finished, I'm wondering what a system would look like with:

    ... * Clang/LLVM as the system C/C++ compiler

    Slower

    I'm developing a tiny game engine in C(11) and I've built profiling into the core, and I profile many of the math-heavy parts separately as well. Clang 3.3 actually almost always does better than gcc 4.8 here. Not by much, but there you have it. You should take a look at the SLP vectorizer, which will come enabled in -O3 as of Clang 3.4 but can already be enable separately with -fslp-vectorize.

    So for single threaded code I'm already leaning towards Clang. OpenMP is going to get integrated as well, as of then, all bets are off. Exiting times to be a C/C++ dev... (or any other kind, for that matter, LuaJIT never ceases to amaze me).