On Wed, Aug 26, 2015 at 3:30 PM, Jed Brown <[email protected]> wrote:
> Mark Adams <[email protected]> writes: > > I really think that it does not matter. Just as long as it is noisy. > IMO, > > but we have no data, and I'm not sure how we could study it. What is the > > chance that your generator will generate a low frequency vector on some > god > > knows what grid? I can not imaging this happening ... and I'm not sure > how > > I could even generate data to 'prove' it. > > Your hokey hash function generates stripes of various sorts on grids > with leading dimension 51, 100, and other combinations. You know there are more prime number, 100% of them are larger. What do you want to do? If dran48 is one line then I can just copy that and move on. > For an > anisotropic operator aligned to the grid, that would be devastatingly > low energy. >
