@Mikhail If you're writing Qt stuff, the shit is flowing out of you, so you clearly aren't as full of shit as previously. Might want to take some diarrhea medicine anyway though...
so the 50cm long USB is a couple of grams heavier than the shorter one
way to lazy nowadays, instead of working things out through physics and maths calculations, just testing it in real world & if it does not work out, trying to find out the reasons
What's the policy if I received two really good answers to my question? :-D I'd very much like to accept both of them! Is it okay if I just accept the answer of the guy with less reputation…?
@BartekBanachewicz @nwp I know… but I like both answers! They are both very well done. Damn. But yes, one has gotten a lot more upvotes, and is slightly cleverer…
Obviously, we don't want to make rules based on feelings. Only cold hard data can be trusted. Number of users/questions/answers are easy to measure and go up, quality is difficult to measure so who cares.
I have the most brilliant idea. Let's just add a default answer that eloquently assures the poster's qualities as a human being. It is undoubtedly the right strategy, a 100% answer rate doesn't lie! I'll take 50% of SO's stock (they have stock right?) as immediate payment.
Am gonna share a situation I recently faced (that I also faced a lot of time before). It's about this question (deleted now).
Here is what happened:
This user asked a question about CSS and animation, there is nothing bad in the question but the question is (for me) cleary off topic simply beca...
It also depends on how efficient you want to make it.
If you use for a multi-cycle multiplier that does one bit per iteration, you can make it pretty small at the cost of a very high latency multiplier. If you want a fully pipelined 4 cycle FMA. Be ready to shell out some serious transistor budget.
@CaptainGiraffe Yes, it was pretty close to IEEE 754. Some parts require software to support the whole spec, but that's almost always the case.
@CaptainGiraffe Harder to be sure. Keep in mind that 486 included instructions for things like sine, cosine, and arctangent that almost nobody bothers with any more. Most are now much closer to the basic 4 operations, but executing them a whole lot faster.
In the other direction, yes, a fast fmac takes quite a lot of transistors.
@CaptainGiraffe Umm...what Pascal compiler was that? Turbo Pascal had Real and (I can't remember the name) another type that basically used the FPU's decimal mode, where it stored data in decimal, and converted to/from decimal on every load/store. That ensured extremely dependable rounding, but it was dreadfully slow.