Latest version is 2.8.0, released September 28, 2008. Just a few bug fixes and some tweaks to compile with the latest g++. See here for more details.
Lzz is a tool that automates many onerous C++ programming tasks. It can save you a lot of time and make coding more enjoyable. Given a sequence of declarations Lzz will generate your header and source files. For example, given the following code:
// A.lzz
class A
{
public:
inline void f (int i) { ... }
void g (int j = 0) { ... }
};
bool operator == (A const & a1, A const & a2) { ... }
Lzz will generate a header file:
// A.h
#ifndef LZZ_A_h
#define LZZ_A_h
class A
{
public:
void f (int i);
void g (int j = 0);
};
inline void A::f (int i) { ... }
bool operator == (A const & a1, A const & a2);
#endif
And a source file:
// A.cpp
#include "A.h"
void A::g (int j) { ... }
bool operator == (A const & a1, A const & a2) { ... }
Lzz makes ordinary C++ programming seem low-level. How many times
have you neglected to update a header file after editing a source
file? This is a silly mistake, yet we do it again and again. C++
forces you to type and maintain duplicate code. Why not let a
program generate it for you?
Here are the changes since version 1.0.
The parser in Lzz is generated by Basil, a backtracking LR(1) parser generator.
Lzz was developed and is actively maintained by Mike Spencer (mike@lazycplusplus.com).