A reader wrote me today to ask the following. Since this is a FAQ, I thought I’d post the answer here.

With the advent of C++11 and upcoming C++14 and C++1y, the language has strapped much of the digital electronics industry under its belt. High performance software, Libraries, Embedded, Research, Web backends, our everyday software, and trivial systems; Everything directly or indirectly depends on C/C++. My question is -: Will C++ remain indispensable for creating above mentioned class of production software for very long foreseeable future ?

Short answer: Yes, but don’t stop there because that’s not all of what C++ is about!

Expanding on “Yes”: Yes, I think so. The main reason is that several long-term industry trends now in progress favor C++’s core strength of “efficiency per Watt/cycle/transistor + full flexibility and control” in a portable language. For example, for mobile (notebook, tablet, phone) and cloud datacenter (Facebook, Google, etc.) app environments, both of which are clearly large and will continue to experience long-term growth, the critical measure has already switched to “performance per Watt”… if that’s your primary constraint and cost, you’ll usually end up at either C or C++, and the latter gives you stronger abstraction. And performance per Watt is just one example; besides that one, as other trends like the power wall and the eventual end of Moore’s Law continue to grind out, the value proposition of “performance per Watt/cycle/transistor + full flexibility (to express what you need) and control (over hardware and things like memory layout)” will remain valuable in the long term.

Expanding on “but don’t stop there because that’s not all of what C++ is about!”: Old C++ used to be harder, but today modern C++ is far from limited to those categories. As I pointed out my “One C++” talk last week (start around the 42:00 mark), C++ is already a de facto standard language to teach artists (not professional programmers) in the world’s top design schools such as Parson’s, notably using C++ plus the openFrameworks library, and C++ is also a widely used library outside schools for creative interactive applications (again often by people who are not programmers by training), notably using C++ plus the Cinder library.

Other languages are important and useful too, and often are built on top of C++, and that’s great – there is no such thing as “one language fits all,” and everyone realizes that like any language C++ is not for everyone or every use. Nevertheless, C++ is very horizontal, meaning usable in many domains, and the cases where C++ is applicable and actively used is growing, not shrinking; one effect is that we have to relearn what a “C++ programmer” is because that group is getting increasingly diverse. As we continue to make C++ more accessible, I expect we will continue to hear about its being used more and more even by people we didn’t expect, like artists and financial gurus who are not programmers by training and whom we never used to think of as C++ programmers… it’s happening already.