Search Results

Search found 4580 results on 184 pages for 'faster'.

Page 78/184 | < Previous Page | 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85  | Next Page >

  • Structured Storage

    - by user342735
    Hi All, I have a file that is in structured storage format. I was wondering if this format be accessed concurrently by threads. Meaning have multiple threads read the different streams process it at once. The objective is to load the file faster. When i refer to a file i refer one that represents CAD information. Thank you.

    Read the article

  • PHP Speed - Many Echos vs Building a String

    - by Chris
    Wondering if anyone knows if either of these methods would produce an output faster: Method 1 for ($i=1;$i<99999;$i++) { echo $i, '<br>'; } or Method 2 for ($i=1;$i<99999;$i++) { $string .= $i . '<br>'; } echo $string; Thanks for any input you have.

    Read the article

  • Can I write this javascript more efficiently with jquery?

    - by Haluk
    Hi, Do you think jquery could help me get the following script work faster? Thanks! window.onload=function colorizeCheckedRadios(){ var inputs = document.getElementsByTagName("input"); if (inputs) { for (var i = 0; i < inputs.length; ++i) { if(inputs[i].checked&&inputs[i].type=="radio"){ inputs[i].parentNode.parentNode.style.backgroundColor='#FCE6F4'; } } } }

    Read the article

  • Slideshare , API feed for javascript , jquery ...

    - by Alexander Corotchi
    Hi everybody, Can you help me with some information, to make it faster ? Can I use API feed from slideshare with JavaScript (jquery) ? Here, http://www.slideshare.net/developers/documentation I see just "Response XML Format" don't see any Json Response. Can somebody help me with that, some helpful links, or some suggestions, how can I use "Slideshare" API feeds with JavaScript. Thanks A lot !!!!!

    Read the article

  • Mysql console slow on import of huge sql files

    - by Kennethvr
    My import of sql via the mysql console is rather slow and as our sql file is increasing every day I would like to know if there are any alternatives on how to import a sql file faster. Changing to oracle or other systems is no option, the configuration has to stay the same. Currently the sql file is: 1.5 Gb I'm on Wamp with Apache 2.2.14, PHP 5.2.11 and MySQL 5.1.41. Any suggestions?

    Read the article

  • Porting 32 bit C++ code to 64 bit - is it worth it? Why?

    - by NTDLS
    I am aware of some the obvious gains of the x64 architecture (higher addressable RAM addresses, ect)... but: What if my program has no real need to run in native 64 bit mode. Should I port it anyway? Are there any foreseeable deadlines for ending 32 bit support? Would my application run faster / better / more secure as native x64 code?

    Read the article

  • Oracle Merge vs Select then Insert or Update

    - by DRTauli
    What is faster? the Merge statement MERGE INTO table USING dual ON (rowid = 'some_id') WHEN MATCHED THEN UPDATE SET colname = 'some_val' WHEN NOT MATCHED THEN INSERT (rowid, colname) VALUES ('some_id', 'some_val') or querying a select statement then using an update or insert statement. SELECT * FROM table where rowid = 'some_id' if rowCount == 0 INSERT INTO table (rowid,colname) VALUES ('some_id','some_val') else UPDATE table SET colname='some_val' WHERE rowid='some_id'

    Read the article

  • Should I go back and fix work when you learn something new/better?

    - by SnOrfus
    Considering that we're all constantly learning, we've all got to come across a point where we learn something just awesome that improves our code or parts of it significantly. The question is, when you've learned some new technique, strategy or whatever, do your or should you go back to code that you know works, but could be so much better/maintainable/faster/generally improved and implement this new knowledge? I understand the concept of "if it ain't broke, don't fix it" but when does that become losing pride in code you've already written and what does it say for refactoring.

    Read the article

  • Java API Method Run Times

    - by Mike
    Is there a good resource to get run times for standard API functions? It's somewhat confusing when trying to optimize your program. I know Java isn't made to be particularly speedy but I can't seem to find much info on this at all. Example Problem: If I am looking for a certain token in a file is it faster to scan each line using string.contains(...) or to bring in say 100 or so lines putting them to a local string them performing contains on that chunk.

    Read the article

  • C++ STL list vs set

    - by mokaschitta
    Hi, what of those two is faster for random insertions and deletions? I guess list, having the values as the keys as it is with sets seems to be attractive too though. Is performance similar for iterating over the whole container? Thanks!

    Read the article

  • how do i do very fast inserts to SQL Server 2008

    - by CharlesO
    I have a project that involves recording data from a device directly into a sql table. I do very little processing in code before writing to sql server (2008 express by the way) typically i use the sqlhelper class's ExecuteNoneQuery method and pass in a stored proc name and list of parameters that the SP expects. This is very convenient, but i need a much faster way of doing this. Thanks.

    Read the article

< Previous Page | 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85  | Next Page >