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Home/ Questions/Q 974563
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T03:27:18+00:00 2026-05-16T03:27:18+00:00

Consider the following situation: class MyFoo { public: MyFoo(); ~MyFoo(); void doSomething(void); private: unsigned

  • 0

Consider the following situation:

class MyFoo {
public:
  MyFoo();
  ~MyFoo();
  void doSomething(void);
private:
  unsigned short things[10]; 
};

class MyBar {
public:
  MyBar(unsigned short* globalThings);
  ~MyBar();
   void doSomething(void);
private:
  unsigned short* things;
};

MyFoo::MyFoo() {
  int i;
  for (i=0;i<10;i++) this->things[i] = i;
};

MyBar::MyBar(unsigned short* globalThings) {
  this->things = globalThings;
};

void MyFoo::doSomething() {
  int i, j;
  j = 0;
  for (i = 0; i<10; i++) j += this->things[i];
};

void MyBar::doSomething() {
  int i, j;
  j = 0;
  for (i = 0; i<10; i++) j += this->things[i];
};


int main(int argc, char argv[]) {
  unsigned short gt[10] = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};

  MyFoo* mf = new MyFoo();
  MyBar* mb = new MyBar(gt);

  mf->doSomething();
  mb->doSomething();
}

Is there an a priori reason to believe that mf.doSomething() will run faster than mb.doSomething()? Does that change if the executable is 100MB?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T03:27:19+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:27 am

    Because anything can modify your gt array, there may be some optimizations performed on MyFoo that are unavaible to MyBar (though, in this particular example, I don’t see any)

    Since gt lives locally (we used to call that the DATA segment, but I’m not sure if that still applies), while things lives in the heap (along with mf, and the other parts of mb) there may be some memory access & caching issues dealing with things. But, if you’d created mf locally (MyFoo mf = MyFoo()), then that would be an issue (i.e. things and gf would be on an equal footing in that regard)

    The size of the executable should make any difference. The size of the data might, but for the most part, after the first access, both arrays will be in the CPU cache and there should be no difference.

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