With RoR, Java, C#, PHP etc.. what do people use C++ for these days?
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You're comparing apples to oranges. Languages such as PHP, Ruby, and Python are scripting languages. They a) are interpreted, and b) don't provide the kind of low-level memory access that C++ does, and thus aren't suitable for things that need to talk directly to hardware. Java and C# both run in a runtime environment on top of a particular platform and for the same reason aren't always the best choice. In all of these cases, things such as garbage collection can get in the way of speed and performance. Languages are just tools; you choose the best tool for the task at hand. Just because higher-level languages make many tasks easier for a particular application domain doesn't mean that lower level languages don't have their place. |
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C++ is the preferred language when the user experience is more important than development cost. |
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Something that seems to have been overlooked so far are projects where there is already a substantial C or C++ code base. Most programming work is not going into creating brand new programs. If you are so blessed as to be creating something completely de novo, great, but that's not the common situation. It's possible to mix languages, of course, so you can have the old C++ core program with additional code written in some other language. But, this is not easy, for a number of reasons:
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Two of the most common usage of C++ I would think are graphical interfaces and video games programming. |
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Almost everything on the desktop (except paint.net) Everything on the server that RoR, php etc is running on top of (any language that can't write it's own compiler is probably written in C++) Anything embedded smaller than an iPhone Anything with a lot of computation - that isn't in Fortran ;-) Yes I know C# performance has improved, anybody got round to rewriting LAPACK, BLAS or NAG in it yet? edit - This is why SO doesn't work for discussions. Notice the order of comments change as they are voted. If you want to have childish arguements there is always reddit. |
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Anything where performance is a high priority. Garbage collection, HTML rendering, animation, games, intensive computation... |
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And from personal experience Computer-aided Design (CAD) plugins/addins are also C++, especially if you want to target multiple CAD systems (e.e Pro/Engineer, SoludWorks, CATIA, UG, AutoCAD etc). |
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Backends to projects. Many projects are written in multiple languages, where all the backend operations are written in C++ where APIs to other languages are provided. The best project I can think of that does this is GNU Radio. Basically, how GNU Radio works is that all the DSP blocks (modulators, filters, etc) are written in C++. However, you make your radio using python, that is you connect the blocks together in python. |
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While other languages have come along. Many poeple who have used C++ in the past aren't just going to jump bandwagon with Java or C#. Linux all well and good in it's own right, but the majority of the computer Market still belongs to the Evil Empire. Java is NOT the dominant language there, no matter how much the religeous zelots claim it to be. Actually in small business apps, VB is king. I think I saw one figure giving it 58% of internal development for GUI front ends. C# is picking up momentum, but I suspect it primarily from the younger crowd who are less set in there ways. You can argue till your blue in the face virtues of a new language with someone who's been using a language for 15 years, and they just won't care. "Oh that's neat." and they turn back around and continue typing their C++. Edit: OS development, C maybe C++. Tool & Langauge development, C maybe C++. Industrial control, C, C++, Labview in somecases, FPGA development and NO trendy languages. Embedded alot of C, some C++ and some assembly required. (The IPhone is a general purpose palm computer, with phone capability. Not special purpose computer designed for a singular purpose.) PS3 C, C++ and some assembly required. XBox360 Some C#, mostly C++ and some C and again some assembly required. GPU Programming? It ain't PHP that's for DAMN sure. Windows Programming C++, C#, and even some C still, VB. Edit: @Jeff L: The Cult following that many these language have, I find irrational and distasteful. I start edging away from anyone who waxes poetic about ANY language, it's just mental. It's not a matter of opinion that professionally sold applications AREN'T written in Java for Window, it's fact. I'm sorry, but it's true. Maybe in the IT world it's useful, but not for shrink wrapped Windows software. I write embedded software, and the "feature" of not having pointers means that in order to do any practical work there or on OSs and device drivers requires hacks that violate the language it's self. There are cases where you have to "fly without a net" and the interpretive languages are designed SPECIFICALLY not to let you do that. And not to be too argumentative with, but the heritage code base is a hard issue to get around. While we write new code in C and C++, I can't even get management PAY to upgrade old code written in Fortran or Ada to C or C++ forget Java that requires a whole new coding standard and butt loads procedures and documentation have to update, that cost even more. And unless the only software you write is GPL and freeware, who's paying for it is the primary concern. And in many cases "if it's isn't broke don't fix it" doesn't even apply, "if it's broke and no one bitching, we're not paying to fix" is managements choice. |
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Check out the click modular router. Written completely in C++ (with some C where necessary) |
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A lot of micro ISVs are (enthusiastically) using C++ for almost anything you can think of. It isn't maintained regularly, but here is a list of apps written using C++ Builder. I was pleasantly surprised to see WinRAR and Partition Magic. |
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I just interviewed with a company that has C++ programs using VS5.0 as they keep planning on phasing the C++ apps out, so updating is not needed. After 12 years you would expect that they would just upgrade their compiler. If you want to use DirectX the you have to use C++ now, as MS dropped support for a Managed DirectX API. As was mentioned, in the embedded world C++ or C is the primary languages. If you work in a system that cannot crash, then you will may use C or C++ and just don't use new or malloc, but use arrays, so that you won't have any memory leaks, which can be a likely reason a long running process may run out of memory and crash. If you are going to do a great deal of kernel level programming then C or C++ makes more sense as there will be some functions to call that will be incredibly difficult to call from C#, for example. |
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We do these projects in c++:
if you need performance, you should use c++... |
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