Join Slack
Communities
Powered by
<https://www.linkedin.com/posts/kavin-samiyappan_k...
# feed
k
kavin
10/14/2024, 1:54 PM
https://www.linkedin.com/posts/kavin-samiyappan_kotlin-performance-hashmap-activity-7250735696536092672-PXQU?utm_source=share&utm_medium=member_ios
a
Arjan van Wieringen
10/15/2024, 5:48 AM
If it is more memory efficient, why do we only get benchmarks on speed? Allocations not the same as memory usage
g
Gleb Minaev
10/15/2024, 9:55 AM
Looks interesting! But how did you measure the performance? Especially the allocations.
t
Todd
10/15/2024, 1:18 PM
There's more context in Romain's original post:
https://www.romainguy.dev/posts/2024/a-better-hashmap/
g
Gleb Minaev
10/15/2024, 1:24 PM
@Todd
Sorry, I could miss it. But I already read the article and didn't find neither any description of benchmarking process nor argument why memory performance is determined by number of memory allocations.
Open in Slack
Previous
Next