Last weekend for review of the Convert library
This is the last weekend of the the review of the Convert library, which started Monday May 12 and goes through Sunday May 25. For those who have been to C++ Now please take a look at the library and review it. I am looking for at least a half dozen reviews before I can decide, based on the reviews, whether or not the library should be accepted into Boost. The Convert library builds on the boost::lexical_cast original design and experience and takes those conversion/transformation-related ideas further. * to be applicable to a wider range of conversion-related use-cases, * to provide a more flexible, extendible and configurable type-conversion framework. The Convert library can be cloned from GitHub at https://github.com/yet-another-user/boost.convert. The library follows the modular-boost format. Just clone it to modular-boost/libs in the 'convert' subdirectory and run 'b2 headers' in order to create a link to its header file directory in the modular-boost/boost subdirectory. The library comes with documentation in its top-level index.html or doc/html/index.html file. You can also view the documentation online at http://yet-another-user.github.io/boost.convert/doc/html/index.html. The library is by Vladimir Batov and is a second reiteration with a greater focus of his library that was reviewed in the past. I am Edward Diener and I am again serving as the review manager of the library. If you have used lexical_cast or, like many C++ programmers, have used stringstream to do string-to-type, type-to-string conversions please look at this library. We need reviews of whatever point of view before a library can even be considered a Boost library. Comments, questions, and reviews will all be welcome for the library. Please try to sum up your review by answering these questions: 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: Do you think the library should be accepted as a Boost library? As always whether you do or do not feel that the library should be accepted into Boost please specify any changes you would like to see for the library to be better in your estimation.
participants (1)
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Edward Diener