Le 2015-06-23 22:44, Luc Maisonobe a écrit :
Hi Andrew,
Le 23/06/2015 19:08, Andrew E. Davidson a écrit :
sorry if this has been asked many times before. (maybe this can be
added to the FAQ?)
has anyone done any bench marking?
Yes.
The idea of having a math package that is implemented
.
- Original Message - From: Andrew E. Davidson
andy_david...@apple.com
To: user@commons.apache.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 12:08 PM
Subject: [math] noob; performance metrics?
sorry if this has been asked many times before. (maybe this can be added
to the FAQ?)
has
sorry if this has been asked many times before. (maybe this can be added to the
FAQ?)
has anyone done any bench marking?
The idea of having a math package that is implemented pure java is very
attractive. My experience with machine learning is that java is very slow. To
go fast you need to
To amplify and extend the question - would also like to know the same info
where bigdecimal is involved.
Thanks.
- Original Message -
From: Andrew E. Davidson andy_david...@apple.com
To: user@commons.apache.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 12:08 PM
Subject: [math] noob; performance
: Andrew E. Davidson
andy_david...@apple.com
To: user@commons.apache.org
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 12:08 PM
Subject: [math] noob; performance metrics?
sorry if this has been asked many times before. (maybe this can be added
to the FAQ?)
has anyone done any bench marking?
The idea
Hi Andrew,
Le 23/06/2015 19:08, Andrew E. Davidson a écrit :
sorry if this has been asked many times before. (maybe this can be
added to the FAQ?)
has anyone done any bench marking?
Yes.
The idea of having a math package that is implemented pure java is
very attractive. My experience