Hi All, Thank you Joaquín for writing and sharing the library, and sorry if this sounds ungrateful, but looking at the documentation, it doesn't look comfortable. It looks like it assumes one is already familiar with std::hive, but it is difficult for a regular C++ programmer to learn hive. Even the common source of truth -- cppreference.com -- doesn't have std::hive documented. Are the users expected to use https://eel.is/c++draft/sequences#hive as reference, and p0447r28 as motivation? I would expect a library to be self-contained: the documentation comes with the sources. Regards, &rzej; sob., 4 kwi 2026 o 23:11 Ion Gaztañaga via Boost <boost@lists.boost.org> napisał(a):
Dear Boost community,
The formal review of Joaquín M. López Muñoz's boost::container::hub container is scheduled for April 16 - April 26.
Hub is a nearly drop-in replacement of C++26 std::hive that has excellent performance.
https://github.com/joaquintides/hub/blob/develop/README.md#performance
The codebase is fairly small (single 1800-LOC header), and due to the subject matter, it is proposed to be part of Boost.Container rather than as a separate library.
You can find code and documentation here:
https://github.com/joaquintides/hub
Best,
Ion
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