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You're reading from  C++ High Performance. - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inDec 2020
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781839216541
Edition2nd Edition
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Authors (2):
Björn Andrist
Björn Andrist
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Björn Andrist

Björn Andrist is a freelance software consultant currently focusing on audio applications. For more than 15 years, he has been working professionally with C++ in projects ranging from UNIX server applications to real-time audio applications on desktop and mobile. In the past, he has also taught courses in algorithms and data structures, concurrent programming, and programming methodologies. Björn holds a BS in computer engineering and an MS in computer science from KTH Royal Institute of Technology.
Read more about Björn Andrist

Viktor Sehr
Viktor Sehr
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Viktor Sehr

Viktor Sehr is the founder and main developer of the small game studio Toppluva AB. At Toppluva he develops a custom graphics engine which powers the open-world skiing game Grand Mountain Adventure. He has 13 years of professional experience using C++, with real-time graphics, audio, and architectural design as his focus areas. Through his career, he has developed medical visualization software at Mentice and Raysearch Laboratories as well as real-time audio applications at Propellerhead Software. Viktor holds an M.S. in media science from Linköping University.
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Some real-world examples

We will end this chapter by examining two examples where std::tuple, std::tie(), and some template metaprogramming can help us to write clean and efficient code in practice.

Example 1: projections and comparison operators

The need to implement comparison operators for classes dramatically decreased with C++20, but there are still cases where we need to provide a custom comparison function when we want to sort objects in some custom order for a specific scenario. Consider the following class:

struct Player {
  std::string name_{};
  int level_{};
  int score_{};
  // etc...
};
auto players = std::vector<Player>{};
// Add players here...

Say that we want to sort the players by their attributes: the primary sort order level_ and the secondary sort order score_. It's not uncommon to see code like this when implementing comparison and sorting:

auto cmp = [](const Player& lhs, const Player& rhs) {
  if (lhs.level_ ==...
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C++ High Performance. - Second Edition
Published in: Dec 2020Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781839216541

Authors (2)

author image
Björn Andrist

Björn Andrist is a freelance software consultant currently focusing on audio applications. For more than 15 years, he has been working professionally with C++ in projects ranging from UNIX server applications to real-time audio applications on desktop and mobile. In the past, he has also taught courses in algorithms and data structures, concurrent programming, and programming methodologies. Björn holds a BS in computer engineering and an MS in computer science from KTH Royal Institute of Technology.
Read more about Björn Andrist

author image
Viktor Sehr

Viktor Sehr is the founder and main developer of the small game studio Toppluva AB. At Toppluva he develops a custom graphics engine which powers the open-world skiing game Grand Mountain Adventure. He has 13 years of professional experience using C++, with real-time graphics, audio, and architectural design as his focus areas. Through his career, he has developed medical visualization software at Mentice and Raysearch Laboratories as well as real-time audio applications at Propellerhead Software. Viktor holds an M.S. in media science from Linköping University.
Read more about Viktor Sehr