// not ideal, but these are used to register a reference to the surface we were constructed with
Surface8u mSurface8u;
Surface16u mSurface16u;
Surface32f mSurface32f;
@BartekBanachewicz I had a similar bug on windows, turned out to be UB before the destructor. The entire system froze, debugger and all at a freemem call.
I have a question about linked lists. Is there a reasonable scenario on a desktop computer (lets say an i5 with a reasonable memory bandwidth) where the linked list will outperform an std::vector<POD> ?
I have a question about linked lists. Can anyone state a scenario with a reasonable desktop computer (lets say an i5 with a reasonable memory bandwidth) where the linked list will outperform an std::vector<POD> ?
@CaptainGiraffe So, make sizeof(POD) very large, make the collection get mutated many times (inserting/removing in the middle) and the read access scattered, then lists might start becoming faster. There's also side-constraints like iterator stability
@CaptainGiraffe And mine was an immediate reponse to that.
Note, you can use generic implementations of algorithms, and they can work on a plethora of datastructures transparently. All that is mere programming technique. However, where the rubber meets the road, the performance characteristics will be very different for the various combinations.
It does not make sense to compare "data structure performance" in isolation from operations