@@rapidfire9130 no. try to learn to speak like a person would. know how to communicate and express ideas with intention, security and conciousness. that's even lower than C can ever get.
@bunch of nerds I agree, I have one grandfather who studying electronics in his retired spare time. He asked so many questions to me since I'm electrical engineer. Today he is learning through online courses!. I learned from him is that focus and persistent are more important than age related dependency.
@@anant6778 Yes, that is a characteristic of English and Irish and otherwise British people, that "boastful banter" part. Thankfully not all Europeans are alike.
"I value experience over theory when there's a clash... You need a pragmatic approach to stop good ideas from spoiling good work" He's not only a great scientist but also a first-class engineer!
Fantastic. Remember : It was early 1994 guys ! Look at this language today, it is extremely interesting. Quite almost all he talked about has been true and realised. He was fare beyond the other teams, the lack of publicity is a pity, really.
the interesting thing is the way C/linux programmers looked in the 70s/80s like rebels rockers wizards of their time, Bjarne to me looks and talks like a next generation
Geez, I guess it's time to don my necromancer's robe again! Yes, yes, he absolutely is. And his speech skill is something spectacular, too! Like... It's so uninterrupted. Focused. Concentrated. Precise. Maybe I'm just speaking some weird nonsense, but at least for me such style is riveting. It makes me REALLY want to learn something new, almost with a childlike intensity.
He actually is not genius. Mr Stroustrup successfully integrated a bunch of ideas into a product, he is hard-working and has a very high intellectual capacity. The people at Xerox PARC who created object oriented programming and GUI were the real geniuses.
@@tekinsal8396 Unfortunately, your explanation and proposition are extremely meaningless. Genius is a concept of intelligence and It means "creative intelligence". All geniuses in history have brought together previous developments while inventing a particular development in all areas of life.
@@bulentgercek You cannot possibly speak for all genuises and all history. Your arrogance is evidence enough to discard you. This is TH-cam comments section, i.e. the lowest of the lows in social pyramid. Go get a life if you need someone to argue with. And, no, Stroustrup did not invent anything, he just created something. C++ is a contraption at best, not a marvel.
I had lived with his "Annotated C++ Reference" 4 years prior to this lecture, and it's only today in 2018 that I get to see the man for the 1st time. He is every bit as fascinating as I expected.
03:10 simula, PhD, Cambridge, project distributed systems, simulator 04:46 pascal, strong typed systems 05:57 find a way to run more efficiently 07:15 rewrite BCPL, direct ancestor of the C language 08:35 program organisation, runtime efficiency 09:12 Bell labs, C with classes 09:56 why C ? 10:50 my business was program organisation 11:48 classes came in
@@surrebral haha when I originaly wrote the statement i was tempted too. That said, I find it amazing how some folk have such massive impact. I have altered my career path due to my recent involvement with C++ and I have Bjarne and many others to thank.
58:13 "The goose gotta flap". :) Great stuff!! This lecture brings back lots of old memories when I was first introduced to C++ in my sophomore year as a computer science student at CSUN -- around the same time of this recording. Sadly, I had very little understanding of object-oriented programming at the time, but I was always fascinated by its paradigm. C++ (Visual C++) was the first language that I learned about OOP, right before I was introduced to Java in around 1995-1996.
They gave their privileges, love life, interaction with friends and family and dedicated their life for something which makes its easier to do things i admire these people
According to several people working at AT&T in that era, it wasn't about sacrifice. They were tasked to do various interesting stuff, mostly without pressure on time and budget. They had the free time to tackle big projects without immediate return on investment. Some form of university applied to practical work. There were playing with fun stuff like kids.
C++ has changed so much in these 7 years though. Ranges and span are almost like they are a different language, and now pipelines? Btw, it took them long enough to bring those to c++... it feels amazing to sort and reverse and so on in so little code compared to the normal c++ way. (just watched an AT&T archive vid about unix, and how pipelines are almost the centrepiece of the system. It was a genius idea! Been using them a lot lately in bash as well, love it)
Bjarne Stoustrup speaks my mind. I love freedom of choice. So here is my small list of prefered programming languages: 1) "C" => for driver development ... 2) "C++" => for hardware near system software development & complex applications with realtime requirements ... 3) "Python" => for quick & "dirty" prototyping application software ... concept studies etc. ... 4) "Go" => system & application software development targeting distributed systems ... ...
@@TashaRansomArt I know what Python is. The OP originally said "Phyton" lol. BTW, I'm currently going through Stroustrup's C++ book. It's a lot of fun!
I liked when he tugged on the bird's string. It felt like there was some sort of shift in tone or topic whenever he gave it a tug, although I couldn't quite place it.
It would be a dream of mine to meet that man. Just a fantastic human being :) I have NEVER done anything worthy by writing software. In the early 1990's I was introduced to the "home computer", and in the late 1990's I took some programming classes at a (very expensive, overrated university), and decided that I want to be a "programmer". One of the books we used in the C++ class was the Deitel & Deitel one. That didn't happen. I ended up transferring in year 3 of my IT degree to a community college (yeah, stupid) and got an A.S. IT there, and never found a job with it upon graduation. At community college I took courses in things like Java, and did poorly. In the early 2000's I bought numerous programming books from the likes of Barnes & Noble and then from Amazon, thinking that "if I just get THAT book, then I'll be able to write software". One book I bought was one of Barne's older C++ books. In the late 2010's I was homeschooling my son along with my wife, and I bought MORE programming books. While I did teach how to write simple computer programs, my own frustrations at not having met my own dream of being a programmer manifested themselves in my son ultimately hating doing any programming. Upon my divorce from her, I threw away many of the books. Surely by now I'd never have to worry about those programming books again! In the past two years I've gotten MORE books, and threw others away, and at one point I was liking PHP & MySQL. I even made a heart beat/pressure tracker for my husband. In the past few months I've started thinking about programming again, and one of the books I just received in the mail today was Barne's book Principals & Practices Using C++, and I have to say that I am really enjoying this C++ book. Despite my frustrations with programming over the years, SOMETHING about it keeps drawing me back. Fingers crossed this time :)
"In the late 2010's I was homeschooling my son along with my wife" but then following that with " I even made a heart beat/pressure tracker for my husband." what?!
18:52 "If, on the other hand, you work under DOS... it'll feel like a DOS language." Hahaha! He spoke these words in 1994, when DOS programmers were suffering with the inelegance of segmented memory and the 20-bit memory barrier. C/C++ for DOS had to include near vs. far pointers and memory models.. ugh!
Obviously C++ has changed a lot since then, but I definitely think it's still a language that adapts to solve contemporary problems. Threads, std::function and smart pointers are a great example
Facebook started with Php. Now most of its backend is in C++. Twitter started with Ruby. Now it's mostly Java and C++. Google started with Python. Now it's mostly Go and C++. Eventually as developers mature with their software they'll seek for mature tools like C++. 😊
via Wikipedia "In 1979, Bjarne Stroustrup, a Danish computer scientist, began work on "C with Classes", the predecessor to C++. In 1982, Stroustrup started to develop a successor to C with Classes, which he named "C++" (++ being the increment operator in C) after going through several other names. New features were added, including virtual functions, function name and operator overloading, references, constants, type-safe free-store memory allocation (new/delete), improved type checking, and BCPL style single-line comments with two forward slashes (//). Furthermore, Stroustrup developed a new, standalone compiler for C++, Cfront. In 1985, the first edition of The C++ Programming Language was released, which became the definitive reference for the language, as there was not yet an official standard. The first commercial implementation of C++ was released in October of the same year. In 1989, C++ 2.0 was released, followed by the updated second edition of The C++ Programming Language in 1991. New features in 2.0 included multiple inheritance, abstract classes, static member functions, const member functions, and protected members. In 1990, The Annotated C++ Reference Manual was published. This work became the basis for the future standard. Later feature additions included templates, exceptions, namespaces, new casts, and a Boolean type. "
I think its good to know from somebody who is 'supposed to know' that..at 24:45 ..an Executive summary is something that fits on a half-sheet of paper using Very Large print. I like his honesty and discreet good humor. Lol
I am 31 yrs old, I've been a cook all my life (for 13years) and now i started my coding journey like 3 weeks ago... but, I am really struggling, for some reason, i'm having a hard time in remembering some stuff and making sense of some of them (why some code work the way they do), i don't know if im overthinking it or what but, I really want to learn this programming language.
Don't worry about remembering stuffs. Programming is mostly about knowing that a thing exists and googling it when needed. I don't think programming is any fun if I have to remember every detail about how to do things.
I did the same thing as you and realised it is impossible to learn programming at outmr age of 30+. We are too late and our IQ is too low to understand coding
My view on languages is: The language allows you to express your ideas, in this context, in a clear an concise way. The better the language is in supporting the human way of expressing ideas, and at the same time, the better this could be translated to the way a machine understood it…. It will enable you to craft exceptional results! C++ is a great language for the purpose it was designed for. It has a vast set of features which takes some time to master. The real challenge imho is how we are taught how to program. Some people never recover 😎
I find this funny... I can't say I'm keen on C++, the language, itself. I've done plenty using it... and I find no joy there. BUT... I love to listen to and read Bjarne Stroustrup talking about how he designed it... "The Design and Evolution..." is one of my all time favourite books. And this talk is very good too! Back when I was at college, we all wanted to use BCPL, because it was a "real grown-up language"... (sigh)... nostalgia! I LOVE his simplistic view of types and classes that he uses here.... free of the "religious mania" that OOP has now, it still sounds like a reasonable idea. "No gratuitous features".... I wish the ECMA-script committee had held on to that one!!!
As based as it gets. You see kids, why the world we currently live in still runs pretty smoothly? It's because it was built by people like Bjarne. You the world of the future will constantly collapse, because it is being built by people who can't stick to their JS framework for longer than a month and don't know what the function will do before they start to type it in.
My phone fell between the seat of my car as I was driving and this video started playing on my bluetooth and for like 5 min I was like what the f'ck is Trevor Noah taking about.
From what I hear is how much the computer processes before being actually able to do the thing you needed, something like the time it takes to calculate.
There are two kinds of computer languages: The kind that are made by the person who intends to use them because he wants to get stuff done. The other kind is made by people who want to control how other people get stuff done. C is the first kind, C# is the second kind, and C++ is kind of in the middle.
He forms his sentence like he's programming. No redundancy.
And very D.R.Y.
Most experienced programmers do that, its quite cool
as they say programming teaches you to think and programming enough time in c++ makes change even your speech patterns
high efficiency low redundancy
no such hting as redunx or not , voice any nmw and any s perfx
@@rapidfire9130 no. try to learn to speak like a person would. know how to communicate and express ideas with intention, security and conciousness. that's even lower than C can ever get.
i am 25 years late for this class. sorry professor.
It is never late
Don’t worry, uploader also almost 23yrs late 😂
Nothing is late, let's start now.
@bunch of nerds I agree, I have one grandfather who studying electronics in his retired spare time. He asked so many questions to me since I'm electrical engineer. Today he is learning through online courses!. I learned from him is that focus and persistent are more important than age related dependency.
If you are a true Engineer, you're never too late for this type of knowledge (for free).
I am not a C++ programmer. Yet, any time I see this guy, I have to click. Always informative.
Literally the same. I can learn a lot from this guy.
Well i am probably not gonna create a new programming language but still.
It's like that. People always complain about the language and shit, but this guy is just too amazing to not watch
same here hahah
“C++ is a better C according to rather strict criteria for what ‘better’ and what ‘C’ means” love it.
I love his accuracy, honesty and the absence of boastful banter
@@anant6778 Yes, that is a characteristic of English and Irish and otherwise British people, that "boastful banter" part. Thankfully not all Europeans are alike.
@@nagihangot6133 he is Norwegian :) And it's even more Norwegian think that British
@@moristar he is in fact danish, from Aarhus in Denmark.
@@DanielChristensen-mb5qr cool! Didn't know that. What's up with Danish genius programmers hating people? :D
"I value experience over theory when there's a clash... You need a pragmatic approach to stop good ideas from spoiling good work"
He's not only a great scientist but also a first-class engineer!
Fantastic. Remember : It was early 1994 guys ! Look at this language today, it is extremely interesting. Quite almost all he talked about has been true and realised. He was fare beyond the other teams, the lack of publicity is a pity, really.
Thierry Jeanneret bddhkfho
Not all heros wear capes. Most people dont even know this person...
Bjarne Stroustrup looks exactly like what you imagine someone who made a programming language looks like
True, something surprise me is how articulate and collected hos way of explaining thing
Hollywood would add 200lbs, but they're unaware of what stress and days without sleep does to a person.
looking at the java guy, you might be onto something here
the interesting thing is the way C/linux programmers looked in the 70s/80s like rebels rockers wizards of their time,
Bjarne to me looks and talks like a next generation
@@iiVEVO the Java guy 😂
This man is a genius. A humble, low key genius.
Geez, I guess it's time to don my necromancer's robe again!
Yes, yes, he absolutely is. And his speech skill is something spectacular, too!
Like... It's so uninterrupted. Focused. Concentrated. Precise.
Maybe I'm just speaking some weird nonsense, but at least for me such style is riveting. It makes me REALLY want to learn something new, almost with a childlike intensity.
He actually is not genius. Mr Stroustrup successfully integrated a bunch of ideas into a product, he is hard-working and has a very high intellectual capacity. The people at Xerox PARC who created object oriented programming and GUI were the real geniuses.
@@tekinsal8396 As Stroustrup himself states, object oriented programming was invented in Norway, with Simula, not at Xerox.
@@tekinsal8396 Unfortunately, your explanation and proposition are extremely meaningless. Genius is a concept of intelligence and It means "creative intelligence". All geniuses in history have brought together previous developments while inventing a particular development in all areas of life.
@@bulentgercek You cannot possibly speak for all genuises and all history. Your arrogance is evidence enough to discard you. This is TH-cam comments section, i.e. the lowest of the lows in social pyramid. Go get a life if you need someone to argue with. And, no, Stroustrup did not invent anything, he just created something. C++ is a contraption at best, not a marvel.
I enjoy listening to Strostrup because he really is a great teacher.
He also has an oddly satisfying voice
Barney Stroustroup, I bought your C++ book and you are a legend
I watch this talk once a year or so just to get inspired to be a better developer.
Too bad you will be replaced by AI soon
Nah if programmers get replaced no other profession stands a chance
@@AshifKhan-sn6jx true, thats the implication
@@fintech1378hmm unlikely but even then plenty of people will program for recreational purposes and strive to be a good developer
Legend! This guy needs a big statue in the middle of New York Harbor right next to the statue of liberty.
I had lived with his "Annotated C++ Reference" 4 years prior to this lecture, and it's only today in 2018 that I get to see the man for the 1st time.
He is every bit as fascinating as I expected.
"I lost half of my hair debugging that program" HA
he's like one punch man
@@alexanderleeart well... a Half punch Man!
I laughed at that as well
lol
haha :D
This lecture can't get any better when the creator of the language itself is teaching it.
This video should have millions of views!
it has
18:50 This made me realize that this was recorded before Windows 95.
After 24 years of C++ programming : I love it and : I owe you man
"Hello I'm a pianist hostel I'd like to tell a bit about C++" -- yes thank you closed captions I thought that's what Bjarne said.
03:10 simula, PhD, Cambridge, project distributed systems, simulator 04:46 pascal, strong typed systems 05:57 find a way to run more efficiently 07:15 rewrite BCPL, direct ancestor of the C language 08:35 program organisation, runtime efficiency 09:12 Bell labs, C with classes 09:56 why C ? 10:50 my business was program organisation 11:48 classes came in
It's amazing to think that his work has touched our lives over so many vectors.
You mean std:: vectors?
hehe@@surrebral
@@assonancex that was a bad joke, but I couldn't resist.
@@surrebral haha when I originaly wrote the statement i was tempted too.
That said, I find it amazing how some folk have such massive impact.
I have altered my career path due to my recent involvement with C++ and I have Bjarne and many others to thank.
25 years later and he still has the same haircut. 😐
If it ain't broke...
What stupid comment
@@DrSpooglemon hahaha
@@Woodwerker Thanks
Lol
Alternate title :
"I was working on a language i struggled with so i just created my own and nowadays it's the world leader"
58:13 "The goose gotta flap". :) Great stuff!! This lecture brings back lots of old memories when I was first introduced to C++ in my sophomore year as a computer science student at CSUN -- around the same time of this recording. Sadly, I had very little understanding of object-oriented programming at the time, but I was always fascinated by its paradigm. C++ (Visual C++) was the first language that I learned about OOP, right before I was introduced to Java in around 1995-1996.
It's crazy that I'm watching a video on what I'm learning that was recorded on the same month and same year that I was born!!!!
They gave their privileges, love life, interaction with friends and family and dedicated their life for something which makes its easier to do things i admire these people
Not this one. Look up cmake
@@noninvasive_rectal_probe8990 dear god I have found cmake to be so hard to learn
According to several people working at AT&T in that era, it wasn't about sacrifice. They were tasked to do various interesting stuff, mostly without pressure on time and budget. They had the free time to tackle big projects without immediate return on investment. Some form of university applied to practical work. There were playing with fun stuff like kids.
Always wanted to watch a class and fall asleep. Thank you, TH-cam.
Thank you for this video. It is truly beautiful to watch.
C++ has changed so much in these 7 years though. Ranges and span are almost like they are a different language, and now pipelines? Btw, it took them long enough to bring those to c++... it feels amazing to sort and reverse and so on in so little code compared to the normal c++ way.
(just watched an AT&T archive vid about unix, and how pipelines are almost the centrepiece of the system. It was a genius idea! Been using them a lot lately in bash as well, love it)
Thanks for the next video recommendation!
Thanks for the upload and sharing. I can't see stuff like this on any of my TV channels. I guess nobody can.
Bjarne Stoustrup speaks my mind. I love freedom of choice. So here is my small list of prefered programming languages:
1) "C" => for driver development ...
2) "C++" => for hardware near system software development & complex applications with realtime requirements ...
3) "Python" => for quick & "dirty" prototyping application software ... concept studies etc. ...
4) "Go" => system & application software development targeting distributed systems ...
...
What's Phyton? Is that similar to Crypton?
@@atlantic_love python is an interpreted scripting language. You should try it. It's fun and gets you programming.
@@TashaRansomArt I know what Python is. The OP originally said "Phyton" lol.
BTW, I'm currently going through Stroustrup's C++ book. It's a lot of fun!
Grow up, @@atlantic_love
@@exnihilonihilfit6316 Get a sense of humor, and then you too can grow up :)
"C makes it easier to shoot on the foot.. While C++ makes it harder. But when you do it blows your whole leg off"
- Mr Bjarne
I liked when he tugged on the bird's string. It felt like there was some sort of shift in tone or topic whenever he gave it a tug, although I couldn't quite place it.
I have no idea what he's talking about but he does seem super smart.
It would be a dream of mine to meet that man. Just a fantastic human being :) I have NEVER done anything worthy by writing software. In the early 1990's I was introduced to the "home computer", and in the late 1990's I took some programming classes at a (very expensive, overrated university), and decided that I want to be a "programmer". One of the books we used in the C++ class was the Deitel & Deitel one. That didn't happen. I ended up transferring in year 3 of my IT degree to a community college (yeah, stupid) and got an A.S. IT there, and never found a job with it upon graduation. At community college I took courses in things like Java, and did poorly. In the early 2000's I bought numerous programming books from the likes of Barnes & Noble and then from Amazon, thinking that "if I just get THAT book, then I'll be able to write software". One book I bought was one of Barne's older C++ books. In the late 2010's I was homeschooling my son along with my wife, and I bought MORE programming books. While I did teach how to write simple computer programs, my own frustrations at not having met my own dream of being a programmer manifested themselves in my son ultimately hating doing any programming. Upon my divorce from her, I threw away many of the books. Surely by now I'd never have to worry about those programming books again! In the past two years I've gotten MORE books, and threw others away, and at one point I was liking PHP & MySQL. I even made a heart beat/pressure tracker for my husband. In the past few months I've started thinking about programming again, and one of the books I just received in the mail today was Barne's book Principals & Practices Using C++, and I have to say that I am really enjoying this C++ book. Despite my frustrations with programming over the years, SOMETHING about it keeps drawing me back. Fingers crossed this time :)
"In the late 2010's I was homeschooling my son along with my wife"
but then following that with " I even made a heart beat/pressure tracker for my husband."
what?!
I think it's pretty clear: s(he)/it/they has/have/had at least one husband and at least one wife. What's confusing to you? 😅
principal =/= principle
@@exnihilonihilfit6316 You are correct, lol. Was married 16 years to a woman, been married to my husband for 3 years.
Quite an interesting person to meet.
Really valuable his creation.
18:52 "If, on the other hand, you work under DOS... it'll feel like a DOS language."
Hahaha! He spoke these words in 1994, when DOS programmers were suffering with the inelegance of segmented memory and the 20-bit memory barrier. C/C++ for DOS had to include near vs. far pointers and memory models.. ugh!
You can see his book "The Design and Evolution of C++" behind him on the blackboard at the 9:58 mark.
Obviously C++ has changed a lot since then, but I definitely think it's still a language that adapts to solve contemporary problems. Threads, std::function and smart pointers are a great example
I love c++ so much. But disappointed is that most of the it sectors are ditching this amazing language
Facebook started with Php. Now most of its backend is in C++. Twitter started with Ruby. Now it's mostly Java and C++. Google started with Python. Now it's mostly Go and C++. Eventually as developers mature with their software they'll seek for mature tools like C++. 😊
@@hereb4theend yeah and the future is in the DOS👍😁
Amazing language ?
Bro it's bloated as fuck.
@@robinaugustine5998😂
still applicable today. insightful.
this video deserves millions of views
This man is a legend.
His dry sarcasm at times is pure gold lol
Such a Norwegian :) Always calm, always critical and always happy :)
@@moristar Except the fact that he's Danish.
via Wikipedia
"In 1979, Bjarne Stroustrup, a Danish computer scientist, began work on "C with Classes", the predecessor to C++.
In 1982, Stroustrup started to develop a successor to C with Classes, which he named "C++" (++ being the increment operator in C) after going through several other names. New features were added, including virtual functions, function name and operator overloading, references, constants, type-safe free-store memory allocation (new/delete), improved type checking, and BCPL style single-line comments with two forward slashes (//). Furthermore, Stroustrup developed a new, standalone compiler for C++, Cfront.
In 1985, the first edition of The C++ Programming Language was released, which became the definitive reference for the language, as there was not yet an official standard.
The first commercial implementation of C++ was released in October of the same year.
In 1989, C++ 2.0 was released, followed by the updated second edition of The C++ Programming Language in 1991.
New features in 2.0 included multiple inheritance, abstract classes, static member functions, const member functions, and protected members. In 1990, The Annotated C++ Reference Manual was published.
This work became the basis for the future standard.
Later feature additions included templates, exceptions, namespaces, new casts, and a Boolean type. "
22:45
My hero.
lol
LOLLL...maintains eye contact while drinking water...
@@rohamtavakkoli7562 ..out of a tiny Dixie cup..
i think it was a menstrual cup
I think its good to know from somebody who is 'supposed to know' that..at 24:45 ..an Executive summary is something that fits on a half-sheet of paper using Very Large print. I like his honesty and discreet good humor. Lol
Thank you very much for sharing this!! It is greatly appreciated!!
Do what you fear and do what you fear not at the same time.
Interesting window into this guy's mind.
I'm convinced the goose exists to prevent him from losing his mind from boredom at explaining this for the 1000x time
I have learnt a lot from this guy
I like how he occasionally pulls the string on the bird
He was 44 at the time of recording.
Thank you Bjarne Stroustrup
Perfect lecture, thank you for sharing this valueable content.
This vidoe is an absolute gem❤
What a masterpiece.
Necessity breeds innovation!
I am 31 yrs old, I've been a cook all my life (for 13years) and now i started my coding journey like 3 weeks ago... but, I am really struggling, for some reason, i'm having a hard time in remembering some stuff and making sense of some of them (why some code work the way they do), i don't know if im overthinking it or what but, I really want to learn this programming language.
good luck bro. It is an interesting and enriching journey.
@@Serge-hp5iz Thank you bro!
Don't worry about remembering stuffs. Programming is mostly about knowing that a thing exists and googling it when needed. I don't think programming is any fun if I have to remember every detail about how to do things.
@@safalpiya2903 thank you. It means a lot. Ive been taking a lot of notes.
I did the same thing as you and realised it is impossible to learn programming at outmr age of 30+. We are too late and our IQ is too low to understand coding
The man, the myth, the legend!
My view on languages is:
The language allows you to express your ideas, in this context, in a clear an concise way.
The better the language is in supporting the human way of expressing ideas, and at the same time, the better this could be translated to the way a machine understood it….
It will enable you to craft exceptional results!
C++ is a great language for the purpose it was designed for.
It has a vast set of features which takes some time to master.
The real challenge imho is how we are taught how to program.
Some people never recover 😎
Opening bird pull is epic brilliance.
I find this funny... I can't say I'm keen on C++, the language, itself. I've done plenty using it... and I find no joy there. BUT... I love to listen to and read Bjarne Stroustrup talking about how he designed it... "The Design and Evolution..." is one of my all time favourite books. And this talk is very good too!
Back when I was at college, we all wanted to use BCPL, because it was a "real grown-up language"... (sigh)... nostalgia!
I LOVE his simplistic view of types and classes that he uses here.... free of the "religious mania" that OOP has now, it still sounds like a reasonable idea.
"No gratuitous features".... I wish the ECMA-script committee had held on to that one!!!
This was a few months before I was born. Still love C++^^
As based as it gets. You see kids, why the world we currently live in still runs pretty smoothly? It's because it was built by people like Bjarne. You the world of the future will constantly collapse, because it is being built by people who can't stick to their JS framework for longer than a month and don't know what the function will do before they start to type it in.
I think that with C++ one can build a Learning Being , Doing and Having entity also , Liked and Shared . Thank You :) QC
He already talked without bells and whistles... well without bells for sure!
I love to mathematics prevent me to deep in language theory;
But I like and I consider C and C++ are true languages.
I'm thinking to learn DOS again to start everything which I didn't concentrated 20 year's ago
easier to learn C from a linux command line nowadays
He is a brilliant hardworking decent man
his hard work paid off fortunately, for us at least. at least we pay his overtimes with thank you
Nobody has mentioned the flying duck, what does it signal?
Hi! I work as Chef. Just passing by ..
Chef from Southpark? 😂
He made a great choice building off of C
My phone fell between the seat of my car as I was driving and this video started playing on my bluetooth and for like 5 min I was like what the f'ck is Trevor Noah taking about.
This comment deserves more likes!
Thanks for staying focused on driving
He really does sound like Trevor Noah.
what the hell 😂 😂
Hahahahaha...
I use this video fall asleep quickly 😅😅
When he clicked the cap on the marker for the second time I knew that this was going to be difficult for me to listen to.
C++ rocks.
I'm here as someone who knows C# and wants to know why everyone makes a big deal about c++
It's like he's talking directly to r/bitcoin.
Coding creates creation.
omg, the Creator of C++. This man is a legend in programming world.
If you watch it with no sound, he looks like he is explaining to people that being in prison and doing drugs is not cool.
I tried some youtube video demonstrations on local government headquarter and got into prison
is this for beginners?
Sorry I'm 30 years late for this class, sorry professor. I was only 2 at the time, lol
Great Video, Thanks!
HOw does one determine what "Overhead" is?
From what I hear is how much the computer processes before being actually able to do the thing you needed, something like the time it takes to calculate.
Expenditures not directly going towards a goal.
There are two kinds of computer languages: The kind that are made by the person who intends to use them because he wants to get stuff done. The other kind is made by people who want to control how other people get stuff done. C is the first kind, C# is the second kind, and C++ is kind of in the middle.
There are 10 kinds of computer languages ...C, C# and C++. Just like 10 kinds of people: that /know binary
How much coffee is in this tiny cup?
when your teacher have some existential issues.
Great lecture !
good quality video for 1994
When this interview was done ?
1994 I believe. This would have been around the time I started learning C++. I've been using it ever since.
17:16 i even couldn't think to doing this
I need that birdie.
He opens & closes his pen about ten times a minute. I'm not even joking! 🤣
He is just opening and closing braces after making a statement.
Salute sir 👏
24:26 - 25:26
Ahahahah wtf
Recompile my world :-)
it's a common expression among programmers. Eg: Oh, no! If we do that we have to compile the whole world again..... :p