I agree with Anonymous Monk. This looks exciting and I might be tempted help to help and give a few bucks, but your only link is to the fund raising campaign (a nice clip, BTW), but nothing related to the project objectives, or about the project progress, nothing about the results so far, nothing about what the simplified Perl to work with your compiler is supposed to mean, and so on.
Also, the only benchmark is, I understand, an astronomy n-body problem, so, I would guess, a very CPU-intensive problem, with possibly some opportunities for multi-threading or even massive parallel processing. Any way to get more details? About other types of processing where performance matters?
To Will: can you supply tools and data where I could test (and understand) what you are doing?
Posts are HTML formatted. Put <p> </p> tags around your paragraphs. Put <code> </code> tags around your code and data!
Titles consisting of a single word are discouraged, and in most cases are disallowed outright.
Read Where should I post X? if you're not absolutely sure you're posting in the right place.
Please read these before you post! —
Posts may use any of the Perl Monks Approved HTML tags:
- a, abbr, b, big, blockquote, br, caption, center, col, colgroup, dd, del, details, div, dl, dt, em, font, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, hr, i, ins, li, ol, p, pre, readmore, small, span, spoiler, strike, strong, sub, summary, sup, table, tbody, td, tfoot, th, thead, tr, tt, u, ul, wbr
You may need to use entities for some characters, as follows. (Exception: Within code tags, you can put the characters literally.)
|
For: |
|
Use: |
| & | | & |
| < | | < |
| > | | > |
| [ | | [ |
| ] | | ] |
Link using PerlMonks shortcuts! What shortcuts can I use for linking?
See Writeup Formatting Tips and other pages linked from there for more info.
|
|