@ratchetfreak If there is a branch instruction ahead, the processor could build a pipeline for both the branches and wait. When the branch direction is evaluated, the correct pipeline is used and the other pipeline is flushed.
I was wondering if there could be lots of them depending on number of branches (including some in an existing pipeline). Main pipeline splits into two and if a branch is encountered in one of the subpipelines, the pipeline is again split into two.
Intel's official optimization guide has a chapter on converting from MMX commands to SSE where they state the fallowing statment:
Computation instructions which use a memory operand that may not be aligned to a 16-byte boundary must be replaced with an unaligned 128-bit load (MOVDQU) followed...
In C++ you can use __declspec( align( # ) ) declarator to control the alignment of user-defined data. How can do this for C#. I have two procedures written on Assembler in my dll. Arguments for procedures (two arrays) should be aligned on 16 bytes. For C++ it works fine.
I just used declarations...
I want to depict a one handed and a two handed gesture to object structure and connect them over inheritance coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/4d829b5419b16147. Dont know, if a composition is maybe better.
@jeyejow HANDLEs are always opaque references to kernel objects, just pass them by value and don't modify them. But usually I'd suggest an RAII wrapper (VS Provides one in <wrl.h>)
@jeyejow different issues? You should in general always pass HANDLEs raw to a function that only uses and doesn't consume. The RAII stuff was just general advice.
yes but you still need to say that you are making synchornous operations if you are going to have threads writting to the file in diferent positions for example
how to i resize a vector without losing the data in it?
for example if i alreaddy have 10 bytes in it occupied and i want to store 10 more without losing the previous data
how to i resize the vector to store 10 more without losing the previous?