Poetry largely accomplished the same thing first with most of the speedups (except managing your python installations) and had the disadvantage of starting before the PEPs you mentioned were standardized.
Poetry isn't really a package manager as much as packaging management (as in packaging and publishing your specific package) and dependency management.
Banner grabs, port knocking, ssl fingerprinting, application fingerprinting etc.
It's a just a transpiler to valid C++ code, so calling C++ code from cpp2 should be fine, but calling cpp2 code from C++ is an issue. There is no implementing half of a C++ compiler because it just uses clang or…
Poetry largely accomplished the same thing first with most of the speedups (except managing your python installations) and had the disadvantage of starting before the PEPs you mentioned were standardized.
Poetry isn't really a package manager as much as packaging management (as in packaging and publishing your specific package) and dependency management.
Banner grabs, port knocking, ssl fingerprinting, application fingerprinting etc.
It's a just a transpiler to valid C++ code, so calling C++ code from cpp2 should be fine, but calling cpp2 code from C++ is an issue. There is no implementing half of a C++ compiler because it just uses clang or…