24 Mar
2020
24 Mar
'20
7 p.m.
degski wrote:
On Tue, 24 Mar 2020 at 12:18, Peter Dimov via Boost
wrote: Mike wrote:
As degski mentioned, I doubt clang 3.4 was a particularly popular compiler to begin with, so the answer is probably no.
Clang 3.4 was the default Clang on Ubuntu Trusty.
And then there was Xenial and there after Bionic, and judging from the past release dates soon a new LTS release. In the meanwhile IBM acquired RedHat (and Fedora and CentOS) ...
Sure, I'm not saying it's relevant. But if you consider g++ 4.8 popular because it was default on Trusty, you can't consider Clang 3.4 not-popular because it was, too.