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By 2006, C++ had been in widespread industrial use for 20 years. It contained parts that had survived unchanged since introduced into C in the early 1970s as well as features that were novel in the early 2000s. From 2006 to 2020, the C++ developer community grew from about 3 million to about 4.5 million. It was a period where new programming models emerged, hardware architectures evolved, new application domains gained massive importance, and quite a few well-financed and professionally marketed languages fought for dominance. How did C++ -- an older language without serious commercial backing -- manage to thrive in the face of all that?
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This page is a summary of: Thriving in a crowded and changing world: C++ 2006–2020, Proceedings of the ACM on Programming Languages, June 2020, ACM (Association for Computing Machinery),
DOI: 10.1145/3386320.
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