I often read that unique_ptr would be preferred in most situations over shared_ptr because unique_ptr is non-copyable and has move semantics; shared_ptr would add an overhead due to copy and ref-counting;
But when I test unique_ptr in some situations, it appears it's noticably slower than its ...
I often read that unique_ptr would be preferred in most situations over shared_ptr because unique_ptr is non-copyable and has move semantics; shared_ptr would add an overhead due to copy and ref-counting;
But when I test unique_ptr in some situations, it appears it's noticably slower (in acces...
@DeadMG That shouldn't be a problem. We each add silly-benchmark to our most upvoted question for a day, which will turn us to gurus in that tag. If we do that today, we can have turned performance into a synonym of it by tomorrow evening.
it hasn't occurred to you that you're just being jerks now and abusing the tag system to insult people whose only crimes are to ask questions about a subject they don't know much of?
@sbi I wouldn't mind it if you used low-quality content with at least some actual benchmarks in it for your plans, but I think just dropping the tag out of nowhere is pushing it.
@sbi if someone spots it there'll be an inquisition and all sorts. I imagine a certain young mod candidate would be quite keen to find a way to complain about you.
@awoodland I've had enough, erm, disagreements with Jeff (stern warnings arriving by email included) to not to need a teenager to get the meta police set onto me.
@sbi apart from the people who asked the questions, you mean?
to be honest, I really really don't give a damn about Jeff or the mods or meta police or whatnot, but I don't like things that give [potentially new] users of the site a bad experience.
@jalf Who would care if, out of 601991+ users, a dozen would be puzzled for 24hrs? (Really, I bet Jeff is alienating them at a much higher rate than all of us combined ever could.)
Interesting: A British long time study involving some 8000 probands found that kids who were smart above average in tests when they were 5 to 10 years old were 50% (men) or 100% (women) more likely to consume ecstasy or amphetamines between 15 and 30. That study, however, didn't ask about the frequency and quantity of drug consumption, only about the fact whether they had.