On Thu, May 9, 2024 at 4:06 PM Peter Dimov via Boost
The answer to this question is pretty simple. The chair of LEWG is Inbal Levi, one of the project leads of the so-called Beman Project.
Well, that is great news. As its first official library the Beman Project should (with or without your assistance) adopt Boost.mp11 into the new collection. Then they should take the mp11 paper which was rejected in LEWG-I (or was it LEWG?) and bring it up to date. And finally submit the paper and accompanying implementation which has received over two years of field experience. This is quite literally the highest quality library the Beman Project will ever see. And the best thing about it is that all the work has already been done. The library is already written, the paper is already written, and it comes from one of the brightest minds in the C++ world. If mp11 can't get into the standard well I think that pretty much proves everything I've been saying. And there is no point to having a Beman Project, a Boost2, or any other initiative which is not capable of getting through something obviously useful and correct. If mp11 is successful, we might consider a larger work which is even more useful, has a paper written, and has ten times more field experience. Asio comes to mind. Thanks