I’m having trouble optimizing a C++ program for the fastest runtime possible.
The requirements of the code is to output the absolute value of the difference of 2 long integers, fed through a file into the program. ie:
./myprogram < unkownfilenamefullofdata
The file name is unknown, and has 2 numbers per line, separated by a space. There is an unknown amount of test data. I created 2 files of test data. One has the extreme cases and is 5 runs long. As for the other, I used a Java program to generate 2,000,000 random numbers, and output that to a timedrun file — 18.MB worth of tests.
The massive file runs at 3.4 seconds. I need to break that down to 1.1 seconds.
This is my code:
int main() {
long int a, b;
while (scanf("%li %li",&a,&b)>-1){
if(b>=a)
printf("%li/n",(b-a));
else
printf("%li/n",(a-b));
} //endwhile
return 0;
}//end main
I ran Valgrind on my program, and it showed that a lot of hold-up was in the read and write portion. How would I rewrite print/scan to the most raw form of C++ if I know that I’m only going to be receiving a number? Is there a way that I can scan the number in as a binary number, and manipulate the data with logical operations to compute the difference? I was also told to consider writing a buffer, but after ~6 hours of searching the web, and attempting the code, I was unsuccessful.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
What you need to do is load the whole string into memory, and then extract the numbers from there, rather than making repeated I/O calls. However, what you may well find is that it simply takes a lot of time to load 18MB off the hard drive.