I mean, can't we compile a general list of functions that are solved and then just link to it in binary form?
i.e. I have a bunch of utility function or tables that are the best for a specific calculation for a specific domain
And then I inline these into my program.
Using the correct metadata, perhaps I can turn programming into some sort of tag-matching thing so that we can substitute functions for others based on a certain precision requirement
Then, we incorporate this into GCC or LLVM, allowing it to optimize by replacing functions with function calls to simplified functions or simply enumerated table results of functions
And I wonder if it's really cheaper to do something with a problem like such:
Problem: compute the collision of three objects with a speed and mass given identical surface-normal profiles (i.e. they're all circles with center of mass in the same place and same compositon)
In other physics models, they're do only the comparison of a one-to-one collision at once.
They're repeat the collision-computing sequence twice
But if we define a model, given a range of inputs for speed, velocity, and angle for the between vectors
We could calculate enumerated tables for such
Or we could simplify the calculation to something more simple, given certain conditions