Robert Cummings schreef:
> On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 15:50 +0100, Ondrej Kulaty wrote:
>> Your answer is neither relevant nor funny. :-|
> 
> It was very relevant. You cannot easily ascertain the time at which a
> particular line of script is processed. You especially cannot ascertain
> the specific time taken to process a line of script code without
> controlling for processor speed, architecture, compiler, memory,
> network, etc, etc and the exact line of script being considered. 
> 
> As for funny... some people have no sense of humour and to them I
> pointedly point my tongue.

which, given it's forked, is quite clever ;-)

> 
> Cheers,
> Rob.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> -- 
>> "Robert Cummings" <rob...@interjinn.com> pe v diskusnm pspvku 
>> news:1235653678.13128.32.ca...@localhost...
>>> On Thu, 2009-02-26 at 12:47 +0000, Richard Heyes wrote:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> I've been recently wondering (musing if you will) about timings,
>> and
>>>> roughly how long, in a very real sense, it takes on a modern
>> computer
>>>> for a single line of PHP, or Javascript (or interpreted code in
>>>> general) to execute. Nanoseconds? Quicker?
>>> It depends on the processor and the line of instructions.
>>>
>>>> You could say I have too much time on my hands...
>>> You could try washing them ;)
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> Rob.
>>> -- 
>>> http://www.interjinn.com
>>> Application and Templating Framework for PHP
>>>
>>
>>


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