@HaniGoc Welcome to the Lounge. If you haven't already, you might want to glance through the newbie hints (top of the list of the links to the right). The main thing to keep in mind is that the emphasis here is on chatting. We sometimes discuss questions that are on SO, but it's a lot more discussion of questions and answers, not much actual asking/answering here.
One other detail: don't be surprised when you find that even though the lounge is ostensibly devoted to C++, much of the discussion isn't about C++ at all, and many of the regulars here only use C++ somewhat grudgingly, and don't exactly like it at all.
@namezero it is? well it is scary, where I work, most of my friends, try to use python or even matlab instead of C++, they keep it for the end. and they always claim that they are just providing a prototype lol
@HaniGoc Just to be clear: chatting is definitely encouraged. Just keep in mind that this is for chatting and discussion. It's an adjunct to the main SO site, not anything like a replacement.
@namezero I am working on Handwritten document recognition. I worked with Paleographers from Paris. They have a large database of manuscripts dating from the 15th --> 18th century. They wanted to classify these documents by era and by writer
Those are really big integers, too big to fit into CPU cache, so multithreading doesn't really help you — this problem is I/O bound. (I suppose it depends on the specifics of the I/O bottleneck, but let's not pick nits.)
Since you need exactly N-1 comparisons, the answer is 31.
It's the correct answer but I fear he might not believe me :(
@Xeo What is involved in integer comparison? Assuming the integers are represented "as integers" and the comparison is in fact what's taking time. Which the question does pretty much state.
In a makefile "-03" is used both for the compiling and the linking command. Removing this directive does not change anything.
Does somebody know what this directive does?
I'm still new to Haskell, and I'd like others' opinions on optimizing my basic quadratic sieve, in addition to feedback on the code's clarity and functional style.
The qs function currently runs out of memory on larger values of N (somewhere above 20 digits.) My guess is that the code is too laz...
Do you have an idea which part of the code are 'hot' or not? I can suggest minute improvements but without knowing which bit is important or not they're shot in the dark.
@Potatoswatter like you said, because only rich people could afford it, you also said it is not that the rest people don't want them, because they can not afford them - which is my point??
@User17 Do you think Californians think the earthquakes are over? Moreover, why do you think truth is determined by popular belief? The universe ain't a democracy.
Argument from authority (Argumentum ab auctoritate), also authoritative argument, appeal to authority, and false authority, is an inductive reasoning argument that often takes the form of a statistical syllogism. Although certain classes of argument from authority can constitute strong inductive arguments, the appeal to authority is often applied fallaciously.
Fallacious examples of using the appeal include:
*cases where the authority is not a subject-matter expert
*cases where there is no consensus among experts in the subject matter
* any appeal to authority used in the context of deduc...
@Potatoswatter your argument would imply there would be as many people who have beach properties as those who own helicopters because they are around the same price and they are both expenses
1. Very few people are in the market because supply is low. 2. Many people across the socioeconomic spectrum don't believe in global warming, and they're wrong. (A greater number of people do seem to believe in it.) 3. What they believe has no bearing on anything except the democratic process.
@LucDanton Nope it shouldn't be, there should only be 1-2 modular roots and 1-2 start indices for each prime in the factor base. And unfortunately, creating a sharedModCongruent appears to have decreased performance (it took 25 seconds longer)
Let me explain my logic so I can figure out where I'm going wrong
primeStartIndices maps sqrtModPList over the factor base, producing list of lists as long as the factor base. Each sub-list should have at max 2 elements. It then zips the original factor base with the sub-lists, and maps primeIndices over the tuples. primeIndices should be called the number of times in factor base, so last should operate on a 2-element sub-list length factorBase times
Assuming that's correct, I'm thinking it might be worth trying to memoize the calls to isModCongruent within isFactorAt
I don't think it's relevant right now but I think Maybe (Integer, Integer) would have been a more natural encoding. Or we could have skipped over empty entries via e.g. concatMap -- you don't care about those right? hasFactorAt seems to filter those out later on.
Found OTL on an answer 4 years ago. Found that the project's still being updated and supports VS2013. It's a great feeling how its developer's so devoted to it.
And it's not afraid to use variadic templates. Gotta try it.
I am working on an GBA emulator and stuck at implementing CPU cycles.
I just know the basic knowledge about it, each instruction of ARM and
THUMB mode as each different set of cycles for each instructions.
Currently I am simply saying every ARM instructions cost 4 cycles and
THUMB instructions c...
@BЈовић I don't know why you're so icky on system calls, but I'd sure trust it for benchmark or game timings. There's no guarantee, much less in the standard, that it doesn't use system calls.
@BЈовић Its certainly possible to query the performance registers, although translating this to actual time is almost impossible as CPU speeds vary... But if you define time as instructions past, which is not unreasonable for some high frequency trading, this will work. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Stamp_Counter