Thanks for the advice, Vinnie. I added a quick doc explaining how and why to use the general object pattern. http://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/tiny/boost_observers/blob/m aster/doc/boost_observers.htm ^ that should allow you to view the html page I'll add more objects if these are interesting and useful to people. The event template is already there, though I didn't describe it in the docs (I'll keep adding). Observable containers are probably the most useful and would be the classes I would add next. Would you say this is similar to most sub libs that get submitted? Rob -----Original Message----- From: Boost [mailto:boost-bounces@lists.boost.org] On Behalf Of Vinnie Falco Sent: Saturday, September 17, 2016 3:59 PM To: boost@lists.boost.org Subject: Re: [boost] first steps to submitting - boost :: observers Robert: Its nice to see people getting involved with the energy and desire to contribute. Looking briefly through the materials that you provided, I think that the addition of a few things would make your library much more appealing and presentable: 1. Html documentation 2. Some continuous integration, e.g. Travis or CircleCI, code coverage report 3. More explanation and examples of how this might be relevant / which use cases it addresses There are several resources out there which help folks who want to submit their libraries to the Boost review process. One I found is: https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/wiki/BestPracticeHandbook There are also some things that you can do which will better prepare your library for a review, they are described here: http://www.boost.org/development/requirements.html Hope this helps! Vinnie On Sat, Sep 17, 2016 at 2:10 PM, Robert McInnis <r_mcinnis@solidice.com> wrote:
G'afternoon,
This is my first time submitting to a public repo, please be gentle
I'd like to submit a series of classes I have been using since '90. The initial set implements a thread safe subject/observer pattern. I have included a handful of example programs, two fairly trivial and the third more in-depth. All examples are single file examples to make compilation trivial.
This is the first re-work of my original tools, making them more boost-friendly. I expect to add more default observer templates and observable objects, but that will come with time.
WHY?
--
The reason for these classes is to help insure the mathematical integrity of your data model in relation to your business rules. If at any time you were to change one of your data elements without updating all those dependent on it, then your data integrity would be compromised. These classes look to solve that.
As an example:
--
using namespace boost::observers ;
Numeric<long> x, y, z ;
// rules: y = x + 2; z = y * 3 ;
x = 5 ;
printf( "%d \n", z ) ;
x = 1 ;
printf( "%d \n", z ) ;
--
Setting the rules properly, the classes allow for 'z' to be correct each time it's printed using code almost exactly like this. This will remove the possibility of accidently forgetting to trigger the rule update.
WHERE?
--
The repo can be found here: git clone https://github.com/tiny/boost_observers.git
Any input on how to continue from this point would also be much appreciated. I have skype and ventrilo servers available if that helps.
Thanks in advance,
Rob
--
Robert McInnis
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