@Drew Thanks, all deleted. Which means I couldn't delete the others :-} (It would be a great idea if we could accumulate delete-votes (or votes in general, but for DVs, the current dayly limit is too low).
@olaf I am tracking the worst c ranked by net votes and delete counts. And just circle back til they get demolished or someone says We Love This Question
For C, just for the year 2016 questions, I have 7600 closed questions I am tracking.
`select count(*) from questions_c_cd where status='C' and deleteVotes>0; -- 143 rows `
@Paul I have to hunt in the transcript for stuff to reply to sometimes if they are inactive in the room for a while (either 7 or 14 days not sure). If they are not in the chat system in a window at the moment, it takes 15 minutes to hit their inbox from here.
Another way is to go to their profile link, and tweat it with a chat. in front of it. For most users you can get away with this except for new users to chat never here before. So it looks like this: chat.stackoverflow.com/users/1766831
which might be a bad one to choose due to its incredibly poor performance and unknowns. Meaning: anytime one uses rand() they have to know they are in for a horrible wait.
so if we have a 10k table of x, you want to know if sin(x) is cached, is that fair?
I would say no chance that for mysql we should expect it to maintain on top of x values physical and what is in MRU cache that we should expect it to house recent results for fcns we have pumped x thru
It is just a hunch, but I would push all my poker chips on that stmt
@PaulSpiegel Have I addressed your question? If the question is about caching of function calls in general, I think the answer is "no". After all, dealing with the row takes orders of magnitude longer than dealing with a mere function (like sin(x), or even sqrt(2)), so why bother having a cache optimization for functions.
Looking at Stored Functions, there is the DETERMINISTIC clause. This could almost be used for caching, but I don't think it is. I did find it making a difference, but can't remember where.
Here's a guess -- SELECT (...) AS x ... HAVING (...)>111 --vs-- HAVING x>111 : The trivial implementation is to either re-evaluate the expression (first case) versus use the alias x to get the already instantiated value.
To answer another way: I have long looked for the "common subexpression evaluation" optimization happening in MySQL's SQL. I have never found such. (OTOH, I can't prove that it does not happen.)
In the other direction,... I have been experimenting with MariaDB 10.2's Windowing functions. SELECT foo OVER ... AS x ... GROUP BY x HAVING x... -- will fail because there are limitations of where the functions can exist. The error message does not say "x" is bad, but rather copies the expression over.
find a blatantly expensive call, like one that does asymmetric PKI encryption (like a stored fcn of your own). And one would hope that it would cache. That would be a great one to test against. My gut is that it is re-evaluated every time
In that pastebin... What timer are you using?? It seems to have a precision of only 15.6ms -- all timings are within roundoff of some multiple of that.