Hi all, and Happy Shavuoth.

The Tips

Apparently, perldoc -f vec writes 16-bit / 32-bit / 64-bit quantities in big endian byte order, including on little endian architectures such as x86. This may cause issues when writing XS / etc. bindings.

I ended up using the following approach on x86-64 Linux to overcome that:

use Inline C => <<"EOF", clean_after_build => 0; #include <byteswap.h> void add(SV * v_proto, size_t top, ssize_t dest) { uint64_t *V = SvPV_nolen(v_proto); uint64_t last = bswap_64(V[0]); for (size_t i =1 ;i <= top;++i) { const uint64_t next = bswap_64(V[i]); V[ ++dest] = bswap_64(next + last); last = next; } } EOF

It likely will not work elsewhere.

After doing that, I decided to try PDL only to discover that when used on x86-64 mageia linux v7, its long() type was 32-bits and I had to use longlong(). The end of the story is that I ended up using a different approach which I have implemented in Julia (but which I think would also be functional if implemented in Perl 5) and which worked faster.

Media Recommendation

I enjoyed this 90's Pop Mashup in case that is your thing.

Recommended Blog Post

"Why I'm still using jQuery in 2019" which made me feel less guilt. ( Hacker News and via Halinkiyah.)

Licence

The text is Copyright by Shlomi Fish 2019 under CC-BY 4.0. You can freely reuse the source code under your choice of the MIT/Expat License or the Public Domain/CC0.