@ScottW There's generally two major factors of speed at this level. Latency vs. throughput. Integer arithmetic has lower latency than floating-point (except for division) But floating-point throughput is as high as (sometime even higher than) integer thanks to SIMD
@Pubby If-statements, loops, anything that affects the flow of a program.
@Mysticial My Top 1: "To avoid magical slowdowns, profile" - that way, at least the slowdowns will not be 'unseen' (might be harder to explain, of course, but good profilers show cache utilization too)
@sehe In general, profilers don't really tell me anything that I don't already know. But that's probably because I have enough experience to sorta know what's wrong when it becomes apparent.
The true answer to that loop question actually turned out to be outside of my knowledge at the time. Although I had already suspected alignment within a minute of seeing that question.
The dumbest "magical slowdown" I've encountered myself was because I forgot to add "-O2" to the compiler options. It took me about 5 min. to realize that something wasn't right...
@Mysticial I had that happen on occasion. Though it didn't take me 5 minutes to find my numbers were off, it took me about 3 minutes to realize my program was taking too long and abort it
The most notorious "magical slowdown" I've encountered took 2 days to fix.
It had nothing to do with my code...
It turns out that when I changed my hard drive configuration, one of the hard drives was rejecting one of the adapters, and effectively cut the bandwidth to it in half... sigh...
As for how I figured out the denormal question. It's something I regularly encounter when I'm doing micro-benchmarks. Whenever I forget to zero the dataset, the performance tanks because uninitalized data tends to have a high probability of being denormal.
Agreed the most magical of slowdowns happen outside your periferal vision - outside your program, mostly. Filesystem is a good one. logging is another one (even if disabled).
Though I did spend about 15 min. staring at the disassembly of the two snippets side-by-side thinking "what the fuck?!?!" before I finally started to suspect denormals.
@Mysticial Things like that: you need to experience them once in order to recognize them in the wild. Perhaps twice to anticipate them. Or just once, if you're performance-minded.
In fact, this is one of the reasons to linger on SO/C++: you get nuggets of experience that is hard to get in your own limited field of work, and you can store them off as 'latent' knowledge, a poor but valid substitute for the experience
I suppose this is what college is (should be?) all about as well, largely.
@Mysticial For me too, in a good way. I stuck to what I knew way more before SO. Now I have become much more confident to use things like boost, allocators, etc. It is about knowing your stuff (even) better, I feel
And that is, after 10 years of doing intensive C++ hacking (built my own iterators, container adaptors, back when there was (virtually) no boost and basic template support). So there should be a basis of hands-on, lowlevel understanding, in my opinion
@ScottW There is no substitute for hacking. I can tell you, since I started 'working' on SO, I put in a lot of 'extra-curricular' programmer hours just to consolidate the knowledge I was trying to gain (mainly everything C++0x/11)
There's two other very good "WTF-type" performance questions that I've answered. But neither of them were well suited to an average reader, so neither of them got highly upvoted.
The following is a simple loop in C++. The timer is using QueryPerformanceCounter() and is quite accurate. I found Java to take 60% of the time C++ takes and this can't be?! What am I doing wrong here? Even strict aliasing (which is not included in the code here) doesn't help at all...
long long...
I've wrote program, and compiled it for x64 and x86 platform in Visual Studio 2010 on Intel Core i5-2500. x64 version take about 19 seconds for execution and x86 take about 17 seconds. What can be the reason of such behavior?
#include "timer.h"
#include <vector>
#include <iostream>
...
Background
The following critical loop of a piece of numerical software, written in C++, basically compares two objects by one of their members:
for(int j=n;--j>0;)
asd[j%16]=a.e<b.e;
a and b are of class ASD:
struct ASD {
float e;
...
};
I was investigating the effect o...
@ScottW And also. Don't under-estimate the the power of WTF-type questions of any kind, performance or not. If you run down the list of top questions, many of them (excluding the non-constructive ones) are WTF-type.
@ScottW Exactly my thought. This man has a big ambition - 57 is way more than I ever expect. I'm not hoping for reddit/slashdot scale. I just hope to be recognized by the few fellow niche fequenters (like on the Vim question yesterday). Whopping +75 rep
this is probably a weird question, but what do you all think about a gui widget manager that monitors average per-event processing time at the widget level, and for the n highest processing times calls the appropriate event handler in a new thread, where n is some user-defined value (perhaps # of cores)?
problem is that nearly every GUI framework is inherently singlethreaded, and trying to call into them from multiple threads is going to break everything. So you'll more or less have to write your entire GUI framework from scratch
> I think everything is much more deeper that this. If you multiply this number by the height of Pyramid of Khufu and then multiply every third number by 2012 you will get exactly 1/666 length to the Alpha Centauri. – serg Jul 17 '09 at 15:15
@kmore first, that's how it has worked for the past 30 years on every OS under the sun, so I don't think that'd be a problem. Second, it'd only get stuck if all threads in the thread pool are busy with a long-running event handler
I thought to use a strategy pattern to exchange a function (having different behaviour). But now, I think I cannot use it because inside the function I need access to variables/members that should be in the parent class. Is this more a factory pattern?
i'd say it sounds more like the "parameters" pattern. the idea of this pattern is to declare so called formal arguments, and pass so called actual arguments in the call. suitable google-foo should be able to find a diagram?
Your problem is that you are using pointers in C++.
This is a fundamental problem that you must fix, then all your problems go away. As chance would have it, I got so fed up with this general trend that i posted the following tweet yesterday:
@klmr:
I’ve created slides for a “Modern C++ St...
I agree with @KonradRudolph. And I'm reminded of the discussion on shared_ptr in the second panel on GoingNative. There STL explained ownership as a directed acyclic graph (where weak_ptr can be used to break cycles).
But the point is that logical relations and object lifetime are related.
Although now I'm not sure if I can relate STL's remarks to the discussion you are having now.
@DeadMG I can actually not imagine something like that, do you have any example? I can assume an object (e.g. a socket) "dying" logically, but that's a completely different problem than the actual object lifetime. std::weak_ptr is a perfect example of this imho.
@DeadMG Yeah, I thought so, a destroyed window is imho just another object state imho and has nothing to do with the object lifetime. But we'll see if he gives an answer to Konrad :)
I just realized that I could encapsulate the message loop in an object, store it in a shared_ptr and share it among all windows. Destroying all windows results in the message loop being destroyed, which leads lead to application close (due to reaching the end of the main function).
lol Linux Mint came with Firefox 5, so I did an apt-get update followed by an apt-get upgrade. The upgrade finished with this error message:
Errors were encountered while processing:
/var/cache/apt/archives/gstreamer0.10-plugins-bad_0.10.22-3_amd64.deb
E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1)
Oh great, after the update, I can no longer see the crosses in configuration dialogs. That is, I cannot tell whether or not I have checked a box. I wanted to post a screenshot here, but apparently, "Image type png is not supported". WTF?
And now when I boot Linux from the hard drive, I cannot even log in, because the user list looks funny. Must be the same graphics bug that prevented me from seeing the crosses in Firefox.
while ubuntu user interface may suck, it installed nearly ok. the only thing missing was keyboard support, could not type e.g. €. fixed that by googling up a config file.
@FredOverflow i haven't tried but i think mplayer works great in lunix
@KonradRudolph There is a question on when it is appropriate to use shared_ptr. The amazing thing is that four different persons give four different answers. And they are all correct.
@TonyTheLion depends on the various different definitions of "porn" involved, perhaps not just by different parties or in geographical locations, but perhaps also over time. note that current western society, in particular the US, is extremely prudish compared to most cultures that have been and do exist on planet Earth. and this is a relatively recent phenomenon, just in the last few hundred years
Americans are prudish. Examples are: Republican presidential candidates, NippleGate, and other numerous law suits against "Family TV stations" where some minor obscenity happened.
@DeadMG michael jackson's sister accidentally displayed a nipple in a tv show. as we all know seeing such thing is dangerous to males in the age group 7 through 17
and there were numerous repeats in Hollywood and elsewhere.
@CheersandhthAlf the Prude Police would have that upper age be drawn to 21 I suppose, as if that helps prevent all the teenage pregnancies. Prime example: under age daughter of.... Sarah Palin.