I'm kinda hoping for above 4 cores for my next CPU but dont really wanna pay over 400-450 (ideally 400, before tax which is what i recall paying for my i7-3770 and q6600)
@Borgleader If you're gonna do heavily threaded things then I would recommend you to google Martin Thompson's videos. He really made me aware this thing called "contention". But this may already be obvious to you.. :)
@StackedCrooked If were talking lock contention, it is. (I read C++ Concurrency in Action remember? :P Also its a thing I deal with at work too, though not regularly)
@JohanLarsson Am making a React implementation targetting .NET
so I pretty much just defined a bunch of core interfaces as one assembly, then put some useful implementations of some of them in another that you could choose to use or not
@StackedCrooked interesting, I guess this is on the driver level? IIRC the OS should know which socket goes to which process, but it makes sense for the driver to not want to have one CPU receiving data by itself off of the Ethernet card.
HTML is just "Gee, if only we had figured out earlier that XML is shit and nobody wants non-interactive applications, and if only we hadn't made XML even shittier"
and CSS is just "Whoopsie, we forgot to make sense"
The only thing I have not used yet is Qt/QML, but XAML from my experience was just not extensible. Documentation was verbose, and extremely hard to make anything the way I wanted to, because everything had to be "touch enabled!". Also storybords were meh. Qt/Swing/Forms drove me insane, either with the gui editors, or having to manually create the layouts.
https://github.com/reactjs/redux/blob/master/examples/tree-view/src/reducers/index.js#L38 ES6 has some interesting design patterns. ES6 approaches LISP as time approaches infinity.
Meh. I do not care about performance anymore. My usual problem is "can I solve my problem, and make a maintainable usable project?"
Object-oriented programming (OOP) is a programming paradigm based on the concept of "objects", which may contain data, in the form of fields, often known as attributes; and code, in the form of procedures, often known as methods. A feature of objects is that an object's procedures can access and often modify the data fields of the object with which they are associated (objects have a notion of "this" or "self"). In OOP, computer programs are designed by making them out of objects that interact with one another. There is significant diversity of OOP languages, but the most popular ones are class...