Recently, C ++ safety problems have come under warmth, with increasing interest in projects such as TRAPC and Safe C ++, which try to solve the problem. But C ++ Bjarne’s Stroustrup designer remains persistent in the promotion of profiles as necessary for C ++ safety.
Profiles can offer guarantors for storing restrictions on existing functions. In Note 7 February for C ++ ISO members (International Standardization Organization), Stroustroup emphasized the benefits of profiles and noted that C ++ security and security, including memory security, C ++ wre targets from the very beginning.
“The sky does not decrease, but if you do not act now and do not get a C ++ on a trail supporting a flexible profile frame (supporting different forms of safety), we risk a painful decline,” said Stroustrup, who founded C ++ in 1979. It will not try existing code and will not have a favorite new feature. They are also part of the long tradition of Evolution C ++. He recommended support for the initial profiles in C ++ 26 and warned against incompatible ad hoc restrictions as an alternative.