Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "panopli".
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panoply
2015 Nov 10
3
[Aarch64 00/11] Patches to enable Aarch64
Since you're already set up for benchmarks, I would ask if you could
benchmark the difference between using and not using the ARM64 inline
assembly. I believe the original justification on ARMv7 for the assembly
was the processor's panoply of multiply instructions and their long
cycle times. It seems to me that the ARM64 processor is much more like
an x86 one, where using a
2015 Nov 10
0
[Aarch64 00/11] Patches to enable Aarch64
Good to know. Thank-you for the test.
On 11/10/2015 2:37 PM, Jonathan Lennox wrote:
>> On Nov 10, 2015, at 3:45 PM, John Ridges <jridges at masque.com> wrote:
>>
>> Since you're already set up for benchmarks, I would ask if you could
>> benchmark the difference between using and not using the ARM64 inline
>> assembly. I believe the original justification
2015 Nov 10
0
[Aarch64 00/11] Patches to enable Aarch64
> On Nov 10, 2015, at 3:45 PM, John Ridges <jridges at masque.com> wrote:
>
> Since you're already set up for benchmarks, I would ask if you could
> benchmark the difference between using and not using the ARM64 inline
> assembly. I believe the original justification on ARMv7 for the assembly
> was the processor's panoply of multiply instructions and their long
2010 Aug 29
1
Finding functions of large dataset for numerical integration
Hello everyone,
I have been trying to figure out away to integrate under a spline produced
by the package tps(fields). As the package does not output functions I am
trying to do something similar to the trapezium rule. My data are 3D (x, y &
z). I have extracted from the surface output by Tps the values of z at
regular intervals so that I have a grid of figures, for example:
1 4 6 6 8
8