It is especially concerning that the terminal only runs at 2fps using this method of output, considering Microsoft has officially deprecated using any other way of outputting colored text to the terminal:pic.twitter.com/OQ1cJ6ENMa
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It is especially concerning that the terminal only runs at 2fps using this method of output, considering Microsoft has officially deprecated using any other way of outputting colored text to the terminal:pic.twitter.com/OQ1cJ6ENMa
I am so Very Excited to have my terminal slow down to 2fps. And yet, somehow, PDCurses can run at least 60fps.
In before the torrent of responses such as "no reasonable human being would have a terminal with that many characters!!!"
The people saying that have probably never gotten a template error after manually compiling a C++ program.
How the heck did they manage to do that? I mean they must have really tried hard, to work against the hardware, to run that slow.
Well, 30k cells is going to be something like 600k of data. So I assume they just wrote a super crappy parser that really does take around 2500 cycles per character (single-threaded) to parse.
glorious windows
Everyday new reasons to be sad about the disastrous condition of modern software. P.S. "Motiviation" typo in thehttp://readme.md
In my quest for a responsive terminal, I used "Typometer" to measure input-latency. Only good-old conhost.exe responds <16ms. Others all took > 30ms, i.e. multiple frames (CMDer, ConEmu, the "NEW WINDOWS TERMINAL"). Also start-time was long (> 1sec) https://pavelfatin.com/typometer
I just saw this and tested it on my machine. With about half the cells (15k) I get roughly 4fps. Could it be, that they just have a hard cap for it? I mean, this is absurd either way. How did something like that go through qa?
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