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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T06:48:27+00:00 2026-05-11T06:48:27+00:00

I have a loop written in C++ which is executed for each element of

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I have a loop written in C++ which is executed for each element of a big integer array. Inside the loop, I mask some bits of the integer and then find the min and max values. I heard that if I use SSE instructions for these operations it will run much faster compared to a normal loop written using bitwise AND , and if-else conditions. My question is should I go for these SSE instructions? Also, what happens if my code runs on a different processor? Will it still work or these instructions are processor specific?

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  1. 2026-05-11T06:48:27+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 6:48 am
    1. SSE instructions are processor specific. You can look up which processor supports which SSE version on wikipedia.
    2. If SSE code will be faster or not depends on many factors: The first is of course whether the problem is memory-bound or CPU-bound. If the memory bus is the bottleneck SSE will not help much. Try simplifying your integer calculations, if that makes the code faster, it’s probably CPU-bound, and you have a good chance of speeding it up.
    3. Be aware that writing SIMD-code is a lot harder than writing C++-code, and that the resulting code is much harder to change. Always keep the C++ code up to date, you’ll want it as a comment and to check the correctness of your assembler code.
    4. Think about using a library like the IPP, that implements common low-level SIMD operations optimized for various processors.
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