Use the standalone CMake installation instead of the one shipped with MSVC 2017 when testing MSVC 2017 in AppVeyor. This is to (hopefully) address a build issue in release mode that was fixed in CMake 3.9.1 (https://gitlab.kitware.com/cmake/cmake/merge_requests/1100) but that's apparently not yet included in the CMake shipped with MSVC 2017.
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tree: 7f8f9683f93eec9bd3f43779bdc609a5945fa995
  1. configuration/
  2. examples/
  3. extras/
  4. include/
  5. src/
  6. tests/
  7. .gitignore
  8. .travis.yml
  9. appveyor.yml
  10. BUILD
  11. CMakeLists.txt
  12. CONTRIBUTING.md
  13. COPYING
  14. README.md
README.md

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Fruit is a dependency injection framework for C++, loosely inspired by the Guice framework for Java. It uses C++ metaprogramming together with some new C++11 features to detect most injection problems at compile-time. It allows to split the implementation code in “components” (aka modules) that can be assembled to form other components. From a component with no requirements it's then possible to create an injector, that provides an instance of the interfaces exposed by the component.

See the wiki for more information, including installation instructions, tutorials and reference documentation.