On 9/21/20 8:37 PM, Edward Diener via Boost wrote:
Since we are reviewing Vinnie Falco's JSON library I thought that this would be a good time to present a proposal to add information to each Boost library's meta/libraries.json file regarding the level of C++ standard compliance for that library. This could then be added to each library's visual documentation so that end-users would instantly know the C++ standard level they would need to use in order to use a Boost library.
My proposal is to add 3 fields whose data would be the same as the cxxstd allowed values from Boost Build, using the first value of each choice ( currently 03, 11, 14, 17, 20 ).
standard = minimum C++ level for the library extended = same functionality in the library as the minimum C++ level but with extended use given higher C++ levels required = new functionality in the library above the minimum C++ level which requires given higher C++ levels
The 'standard' field would be a single value, while the 'extended' or 'required' fields could be more than one comma separated value. If you don't like the names for 'standard', 'extended', or 'required' you can bikeshed the name, although I think the 'standard' name is pretty well apparent.
The idea is to provide this information in the meta/libraries.json field for each library, so that the end-user of the library can immediately know the usability of the library with appropriate C++ standard levels of compilation.
One downside of a manual markup is that this information can go out of sync. Including due to changes in a dependency of a library. Granted, the status quo also has this downside, so it doesn't make things worse. But since we're talking about a tag in a JSON document, it would be nice if the value could be deduced from dependencies.
I realize that the line between the 'extended' and 'required' entries, as I have described them, could be blurred. The 'standard' field remains the most important. I have long felt that the end-user should not have to do any investigation, in code or in documentation, just to determine if a library is usable for his C++ standard level of compilation.
I'm not sure I understand what "extended" and "required" tags mean. I think the most practical tags are the minimal C++ version at which the library is minimally useful, and the minimal C++ version at which it is fully useful (meaning, the user can use all features of the library).