If I have three objects, A, B, C. A creates B and C on the heap with new. A runs in the main thread with C, and B in a second thread. If B has a reference to A (passed in at construction), can you call A().C().someMethod() in B safely? Assuming inside someMethod it is just execution code and is not accessing any member variables?
@user3061694 if I understand your question correctly, then yes. "Assuming inside someMethod it is just execution code and is not accessing any member variables" so then yes, since no member variables are being accessed, then it's safe.
Why should I care about memory paging when writing my software,
user7659542
I am reading a book which provides an in depth explanation about this concept, but am wondering in which scenarios when writing my software this knowledge could realistically be useful
@PeterT for everyone saying "Just use std::async" exactly how can it be used to improve the situation? I'm guessing async would be declared outside of the loop, but it's not as if async can be restarted so it's still the same problem as std::thread has...
well the same is true as with every perfomance problem, measure it. I just know that msvc implements it with the normal windows thread pool, not sure what the default libc++ libstd++ implementions do
What exactly is a thread pool again? I know g19fanatic said it's a fixed number of threads that have loops...but this definition doesn't make too much sense to me