[vox] [fwd] ACCU: Wednesday, December 12 - Chandler Carruth, "Clang & LLVM: C++ Compilers Still Matter"

Chris Evans axiomfinity at ymail.com
Mon Dec 10 15:12:27 PST 2012


What I need is a sample gdk source code to learn how to open windows and close windows
On gnome 



Sent from my iPad

On Dec 10, 2012, at 11:32 AM, Bill Kendrick <nbs at sonic.net> wrote:

> 
> 
> This week at the Silicon Valley Chapter of the Association of C & C++ Users
> meeting in Mountain View...
> 
> -bill!
> 
> ----- Forwarded message from Ali Cehreli <acehreli at gmail.com> -----
> 
> Date: Sun, 9 Dec 2012 21:59:43 -0800
> From: Ali Cehreli <acehreli at gmail.com>
> Subject: ACCU: Wednesday, December 12 - Chandler Carruth, "Clang & LLVM: C++
> Compilers Still Matter"
> To: Ali Cehreli <acehreli at yahoo.com>
> Reply-To: acehreli at yahoo.com
> 
> First, Robert Griesemer, our November speaker, has made the slides available at
> 
>  http://talks.golang.org/2012/goforc.slide
> 
> Second, as usual, is the announcement for this month's talk:
> 
> When:      Wednesday, December 12, 2012
> Topic:     Clang & LLVM: C++ Compilers Still Matter
> Speaker:   Chandler Carruth
> Time:      6:30pm doors open
>           7:00pm meeting begins
> Where:     Symantec
>           VCAFE building
>           350 Ellis Street (near E. Middlefield Road)
>           Mountain View, CA 94043
> Map:       <http://tinyurl.com/334rv5>
> Directions: VCAFE is accessible from the semicircular courtyard
> between Symantec buildings <http://tinyurl.com/2dccgc>
> Cost:      Free
> 
> Compilers are among programmers' old-hat tools. We use them day-in,
> and day-out, but often we don't pay them very much attention. They
> take our source code, turn it into (hopefully efficient) executables
> and libraries, and, for most programmers, that is where the
> relationship ends. But all of that is changing. Today, programmers
> need rich and powerful tools to deal with the complexities and
> challenges of the modern C++ programming language and its ever larger
> and faster-growing code bases.
> 
> I'm going to introduce you to a compiler which is changing the way
> people think about compilers: Clang. What is Clang? What makes it
> different from all the other C++ compilers out there? Why does it
> matter? What can you do with Clang? What will you be able to do
> because of Clang in the next year, the next lustrum, and the next
> decade? I'll dive into all of these questions and more. At the end of
> this talk, you will be familiar with Clang, you will want to use it
> the next time you write C++ code, and hopefully you will think about
> C++, both language and codebases, with a fundamentally different
> perspective.
> 
> Chandler Carruth leads the LLVM and Clang teams at Google, building
> better compilers, diagnostics, tools, and more. Previously, he worked
> on several pieces of Google's distributed build system. He makes guest
> appearances helping to maintain a few core C++ libraries across
> Google's codebase, and is active in the LLVM and Clang open source
> communities. He received his M.S. and B.S. in Computer Science from
> Wake Forest University, but disavows all knowledge of the contents of
> his Master's thesis. He is regularly found drinking Cherry Coke Zero
> in the daytime and pontificating over a single malt scotch in the
> evening.
> 
> Meetings are open to the public and are free of charge.
> 
> ---- Upcoming ACCU talks -----
> 
> Wednesday, January 9, 2013
> Jon Kalb
> C++ Exception Safety
> 
> ---------
> 
> The ACCU meets monthly. Meetings are always open to the public and are
> free of charge. To suggest topics and speakers please email Walter
> Vannini via walterv at gbbservices.com
> 
> 
> ----- End forwarded message -----
> 
> -- 
> -bill!
> Sent from my computer
> _______________________________________________
> vox mailing list
> vox at lists.lugod.org
> http://lists.lugod.org/mailman/listinfo/vox


More information about the vox mailing list