@AlexCerry You won't be able to know. You shouldn't
@AlexCerry Threads are usually handled by the OS. Because hardware differs, and threads are meant to work on any number of cores or scheme that have virtual threads, usually you can't do that unless you interact with the OS or get into another lower-level API.
@AlexCerry It probably just means that they're waking up at nearly the same time.
@AlexCerry And, another idea is that your output is being buffered. Have you tried timing the actual time since the beginning of the program in microseconds or nanoseconds?
ok, sorry, but I must admit I am totally lost. I am trying to build simple C++ console executable in vs2015. First I tried adding it to an existing project. It built as an object file (after ctrl+f7). Then I tried opening it by itself. It did not build. How can I make it build as executable?
@jamesson In VS2015 it is. VS2017 invented an "open folder" feature which lets you avoid creating a project just to build the code and if the code is simple enough to build it might actually work.