> I'd be more than happy to accept pull requests addressing this stuff. Otherwise, I'll probably do it myself eventually when I have a larger amount of free time somewhere in the future.
I think the whole thing could be summed up with this one sentence.
I mean I understand you wanted the best for the project
Look, you really are bikeshedding about bikeshedding right now. If I like discussing with people how to make some pieces of code more "idiomatic", it's not your time I'm wasting
> So yeah, complexity-wise .reserve only gets rid of the "amortized". Of course it does speed things up by some constant factor. Otherwise there wouldn't be a need for it to exist. The reason I see against using it on every single vector where the size is known upfront is just, that it'll be one more line of code that can break some time in the future without yielding any tangible benefit. I'd really only use it when the vector is actually huge (millions of elements).
> Let me stress again that this kind of tricks are definitely regarded as unidiomatic in Haskell. In everyday programming, this is not the way to write good, readable, solid Haskell code.
@DmitriBudnikov they are. They also happen to be a natural way to model physical machine architecture (which happens to explain why it's frequently an optimization)
@Puppy Well, not really. RAII implies that losing the value means deallocation. I simply want to note when the last reference gets destroyed, but it doesn't have to happen immediately
So I am trying to make a time function that counts down. It's based on something I saw here. The variables are given from a different function. Once time runs out the variable finish is turned to 1 and it leaves the function.
This function works sometimes and sometimes it doesn't work, for exampl...
@BartekBanachewicz How can you use the methods? [That is, for any purpose than to either forget about the result /or/ to create a race condition] /cc @wilx
This is experience I guess. Everyone who ever thought about threadsafe queueing properly has this internalized.
You mean that checking if something is empty atomically is useless because the next method you call on that queue might be on a non-empty queue if some other thread pushed new things into it in the meantime