A general purpose extension library for the C++17 stdlib
 
 
 
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README.md

octastd

OctaSTD is an extension of the C++17 standard library which mainly provides ranges (to replace iterators) but also various other utilities like proper streams, string formatting, concurrency utilities and others. It's meant to replace the more poorly designed parts of the C++ standard library to make the language easier and more convenient to use.

Documentation for OctaSTD can be found at https://wiki.octaforge.org/docs/octastd.

Supported compilers

Compiler Version
gcc/g++ 7+
clang 4+

You need those mainly to get the right standard library version (libstdc++ or libc++). Other compilers might work as well, as long as the necessary standard library features are supplied.

MSVC++ is unsupported and for the time being will remain unsupported. As of MS Visual Studio 2017 RC, basic C++11 features are still broken and prevent usage of the library, with no reasonable workarounds. I will be testing new versions as they get released and mark it supported as soon as it actually works, but no active effort will be put towards making it work. On Windows, you're free to use GCC/Clang, if you need Visual Studio, LLVM integration exists.

Why is C++17 necessary?

Sadly, it's not possible to properly integrate std::string and std::hash with OctaSTD ranges without utilizing std::string_view. Also, C++17 provides library features that OctaSTD would have to implement otherwise, which would lead to potentially incompatible APIs. C++17 also provides some nice language features (such as if constexpr and fold epxressions) which allow a lot of code to be written in a cleaner way. However, it is made sure that no features beyond the minimum supported compiler are necessary to use the library.

Supported operating systems

Most of OctaSTD is entirely platform independent and relies only on the standard library. Therefore it can be used on any operating system that provides the right toolchain.

There are certain parts (currently the filesystem module) that however do rely on system specific APIs. These are restricted to POSIX compliant operating systems and Windows, with testing done on Linux, FreeBSD, macOS and Windows - they should work on other POSIX compliant operating systems as well, and potential patches are welcome.