I found out that the Golden arches used to be a single golden arch..... so if you compress the McDonalds logo throughout space time.... it reads as NM (NOM!!!)
Honestly, if the summon is supposed to deal damage during the last leg of the break, it should have been less accessible and did a ton more damage to 'break'ed monsters.
An underflow state occurs when there are no items left in the stack. As far as I know, for the runtime stack, this is impossible. If possible, it is at least extremely uncommon.
It's more likely that you mean a stack overflow. This occurs when you attempt to push more data to the stack than the ...
@MartinhoFernandes I think it means that Portuguese is less influenced by other languages.
> Spanish author Miguel de Cervantes once called Portuguese "the sweet language",[5] Lope de Vega referred to it as "sweet",[6] while Brazilian writer Olavo Bilac poetically described it as a última flor do Lácio, inculta e bela (the last flower of Latium, wild and beautiful).
@StackedCrooked I copied his final implementation and tried to run some tests on my CoreDuo laptop. Unfortunately, anything I can come up with is way slower than a single-threaded push-first pop-second queue.
@StackedCrooked I thought the idea is fascinating, and you really really need a synchronized queue in any sort of multithreaded network application. But I wonder if it's efficient, and if it's the best one can get, and if it's better than mutexing.
> An algorithm is lock-free if it satisfies that when the program threads are run sufficiently long at least one of the threads makes progress (for some sensible definition of progress).
This seems not to exclude algorithms that use locks.
> I use the term lock-free to describe a system which is guaranteed to make for- ward progress within a finite number of execution steps. Rather confusingly, a program which uses no mutual-exclusion locks is not necessarily lock-free by this definition: in fact the term applies to any system of processes which is guaranteed never to experience global deadlock or livelock, irrespective of the progress of individual processes.
"mutex & locks" vs "atomic" is a software point of view, but not a CS one
It's a bit of an accident that the software people use terms like "lock-free data structures" I suppose. But "wait-free data structures" wouldn't necessarily be more correct in the general cases. The simple use of such data structures is not enough to make guarantees (but it sure helps).
It's a bit of an accident that the software people use terms like "lock-free data structures" I suppose. But "wait-free data structures" wouldn't necessarily be more correct in the general cases. The simple use of such data structures is not enough to make guarantees (but it sure helps).