Path: ...!3.eu.feeder.erje.net!feeder.erje.net!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.eternal-september.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: Janis Papanagnou Newsgroups: comp.lang.c Subject: Re: Top 10 most common hard skills listed on resumes... Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 19:29:53 +0200 Organization: A noiseless patient Spider Lines: 14 Message-ID: References: <20240825192810.0000672c@yahoo.com> <20240825220016.00002793@yahoo.com> <86bk1e4y7t.fsf@linuxsc.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Injection-Date: Wed, 28 Aug 2024 19:29:54 +0200 (CEST) Injection-Info: dont-email.me; posting-host="dc8c8bd71aaeb1cefc029146c9562241"; logging-data="3747912"; mail-complaints-to="abuse@eternal-september.org"; posting-account="U2FsdGVkX19qjX0aMWAM4i/UmNbSaTom" User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:45.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/45.8.0 Cancel-Lock: sha1:NjMzyE1G/Q7uAthiYwxACUQ3mPI= X-Enigmail-Draft-Status: N1110 In-Reply-To: Bytes: 2563 On 28.08.2024 15:52, Thiago Adams wrote: > > It was create latter after people realize std::string was bad. > The same for std::array etc... almost everything is a fix in C++. You can consider them "fixes" of char* or char[] and sometype[], respectively, as something fundamentally amiss in C++'s "C"-base (i.e., if at all, it's rather a "C" fix). But there's much more to these two types than you showed here; you have to consider them in the STL context. Janis