I am unfamiliar with all the Github features and I will ask support to
create a private branch off the public repository. Meanwhile I needed a
repository so I just made everything private.
I do understand my library needs to be perfect before it is accepted but I
need to upgrade the ISO standards before submitting it to Boost (reverse of
the usual procedure).
I do understand also Root.Ptr is not trivial so I'm better off improving it
myself than spend time explaining it. But I will explain it and answer
questions after it is well tested.
But the benefits are there, hands down. It will also jumpstart C++ when
comparing to other languages.
What I don't understand is where is the whole memory management crew gone?
Years ago there was at least 20 people fascinated about the subject. Now I
need to change oil before the engine starts.
Regards,
-Phil
Seth via Boost
On 14-08-17 14:04, Phil Bouchard via Boost wrote:
Once I am done then I'll make everything public again or if I create a new private repository for the parser then I can make root_ptr public.
warning: brief mode engaged
Creating a public repo is not costly. Just split it off now.
From where I'm sitting: on the one hand you seem to regret a lack of community adoption/support, and at the same time appear to manage simple things like repo availability upside-down. This just makes the project (i.e. you) appear untrustworthy, dilettant, intransparent or a combination of those.
Just my $0.02
Seth
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