I know there's been some discussion about the speed of push_back() vs insert() with std::vector. I can't help but think, ins't push_back() definitely faster because each element after an insertion would need to be moved (assuming the insertion isn't at the end)?
Looks like C2x is on a good path to get decimal floating point types
And maybe EC 60559 interchange and extended types? As an annex to the standard
> This is precisely why we don't require sort and lower_bound to work on non-RandomAccessRanges: to prevent people from writing bad, inefficient algorithms. I submit that midpoint is just a part of lower_bound, so it should have a similar restriction.
Aaaaaaactually lower_bound works with forward iterators x)
@EuriPinhollow with self modifying code I understand doing something like replacing a ADD with a SUB or retargeting a jump at the end of the loop. However in modern deep execution pipelines this comes with heavy perf penalties as instruction cache needs to be flushed every time an instruction changes
with jit I understand compiling a whole chunk of code to machine code and then jumping to it. only 1 instruction cache flush needed.
Jit is a weird concept because the alternative is to compile the code once and have everything "jitted" and ready to go. Although this doesn't have much to do with marking pages as executable.
@Morwenn so most network drivers use a common buffer for incoming traffic then sort it into various process specific buffers using memcpy. A zero copy solution doesn't do that, it directly gives DMA access to the hardware to that page and then lets the hardware write the data in directly. It then alerts the process that has occurred. This doesn't matter much for small transfers but when you're sending around Gb+ size data sets it makes a huge difference in terms of CPU time.
In many OSes the zero copy mechanisms can even bypass kernel mode all together
So today I went to have a look at a few pieces of land, one of them is around 40 hectares (40,0000 square meters). The agent asked me 'is this big enough?'. Frankly I never thought about what I would do with land so big. So I asked him a dumb question 'what do people with the grass, do they mow the lawn', to which he answered 'usually people keep livestock to keep the grass down.' My ignorance about rural land is radiation.
You need a lot of goats to graze down 40,0000 square meters. This is for the potential solar farm, and the plan is not to spend too much time on the farm once it's operating.
@StevenM.Vascellaro The first of those was originally about an older installer, where the answer was really quite different. Somebody's tacked an answer for the VS2017 installer onto it, but it's only marginally related to the original question.
@StevenM.Vascellaro Sounds like its code probably needs some updating. Not a big surprise--VS has been working pretty hard to catch up with the standard (especially in two phase name lookup) so quite a bit has changed in the last few years.