[Review] Formal review of Boost.Convert library starts Saturday
This is a reminder that formal review of the Boost.Convert library by Vladimir Batov starts on Saturday, April 23, and is scheduled to last through May 2. *************** * Its Purpose * *************** From the introduction: Boost.Convert builds on the boost::lexical_cast experience and still offers a simple, minimal interface, familiar conversion behavior and more: * throwing and non-throwing behavior when conversion fails; * support for the default/fallback value to be returned when conversion fails; * two types of the conversion-failure check - basic/simple and better/safe; * formatting support based on the standard std::streams and std::stream-based manipulators (like std::hex, std::scientific, etc.); * support for different locales; * support for boost::range-compliant char and wchar_t-based string containers (std::string, std::wstring, char const*, wchar_t const*, char array[], etc.); * no DefaultConstructibility requirement for the Target/Destination type; * extendibility and additional room to grow. ******************* * Where to get it * ******************* You can find the Boost.Convert here: http://www.boostpro.com/vault/index.php?action=downloadfile&filename=boost-string-convert.zip The HTML documentation is part of the distribution and can be found at libs/convert/index.html in the distribution above. ******************** * Writing a review * ******************** The reviews and all comments should be submitted to the developers list, and the email should have "[convert] Review" at the beginning of the subject line to make sure it's not missed. Please explicitly state in your review whether the library should be accepted. The general review checklist: - What is your evaluation of the design? - What is your evaluation of the implementation? - What is your evaluation of the documentation? - What is your evaluation of the potential usefulness of the library? - Did you try to use the library? With what compiler? Did you have any problems? - How much effort did you put into your evaluation? A glance? A quick reading? In-depth study? - Are you knowledgeable about the problem domain? And finally, every review should answer this question: - Do you think the library should be accepted as a Boost library? Be sure to say this explicitly so that your other comments don't obscure your overall opinion. Edward Diener, Review Manager
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Edward Diener