When will C ++ 0x end?

Well, this is the first question I asked, and I did not know that you cannot answer your question.

Answer:

March 25, 2011. :-) I'm not joking, it's official. Well, at least with regard to the committee.

Update

August 12, 2011.

C ++ FDIS is officially approved by ISO unanimously. 21 out of 21 national bodies voted for APPROVAL.

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c ++ c ++ 11
Mar 25 2018-11-17T00:
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3 answers

As Howard already said in question, the final project was completed on March 25, 2011.

Now there will be monthly editorial changes, a vote and an ISO scam before it becomes standard, but on the 25th the standard committee itself will officially come out on it.

Sources:

https://www.ibm.com/developerworks/mydeveloperworks/blogs/5894415f-be62-4bc0-81c5-3956e82276f3/entry/the_c_0x_standard_has_been_approved_to_ship23?lang=en

http://herbsutter.com/2011/03/25/we-have-fdis-trip-report-march-2011-c-standards-meeting/

http://twitter.com/#!/sdt_intel/status/51328822066417665

and, of course, Howard Hinnant, who asked the question, is also on the committee, so he did not think of it.

(Just posting this as a β€œreal” answer, because Howard apparently couldn't answer his question)

Edit
And as of September 1, 2011, C ++ 11 had an ISO published. He did not become more official than that. We have a new standard.

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Mar 27 '11 at 10:13
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The Final Draft International Standard (FDIS) was available on the WG21 website, but now it has apparently been permanently deleted. Herb Sutter said in response to a request on his blog :

All C ++ committee documents are publicly available, with the exception of membership lists and the final text of the standard. ISO-rules, I'm sorry - I asked for permission to leave the project unprotected, but ISO forbids sharing the final text of FCD and FDIS documents, so ISO said no, because this project is technically identical to FDIS and differs from the final text of FDIS only the title page.

Thus, the publicly available document closest to the FDIS in content is a working draft from the mailing list that immediately preceded the Madrid meeting, N3242 .




The Final Draft International Standard (FDIS) is now available on the WG21 website:

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Apr 13 2018-11-11T00:
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C ++ 0x will be finished last Thursday! ISO / IEC 14882: 2011 was published on September 1, 2011. What is unofficially known as C ++ 0x before is now C ++ 11.

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Sep 03 2018-11-11T00:
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