@fredoverflow Strange. I got a much larger file. Maybe it had something to do with my hashing function...Next time I guess I'll try something other than int hash(String) { return 0x80000000; }
@LucDanton Reminds me of PL/M, which had a macro facility integrated into the language proper, so you could do things like declare forever literally while(true), and from then on it would substitute while(true) for forever. Source code size was at enough of a premium at the time that nearly every program I remember started with declare lit literally literally.
@Morwenn I keep thinking I should name at least one computer "Sindy", so whenever I write some really fast SSE code, I can honestly call them "Screaming Sindy Extensions".
But it's not in Rapptz/sol on either the master or devel branch.
Rapptz isn't really... doing much in relation to sol, and that's probably because I've accrued so many changes he'd need to spend a serious amount of time to reviewit all, time he doesn't really have. vOv
What is the difference between vector < Class* > and vector < Class > ?
And also, which one is better to work with when it comes to efficiency and to avoid errors?
Thanks in advance
@milleniumbug There's a little more to it though--the old problem that even if an X is a Y (i.e., X publicly derives from Y), an array/vector of one still isn't an array/vector of the other.
@ThePhD Btw we've been through thousands of tests and all that seems buggy, NOT surprisngly, came from our code, which saddens me also. So I don't think you have to be worried :D :D :D
You should avoid using the c++ version of the test and set lock. Instead you should use the atomic instructions provided by the compiler. This actually makes a big difference. This will work with gcc and is a test and test and set lock which is a bit more efficient that the standard test and set ...
speaking of Niebler, I’m running again into one of those situations where I have a function template that allows both (in this case) target(arg) and target<int>(arg)
I guess I can rename the first one to raw_target or something (it returns void* instead of int*)
@jaggedSpire One of the only things I didn't have to use for that sorting library is polymorphism. I haven't used threads nor SIMD yet but it's planned.
@Morwenn This video is good at getting a feel of the whole process. The slides "How we do the shuffle" explains how you can deal with a few practical problems.