Up until now, whatever examples we have seen in this book had all threads independent of each other. But rarely, in real life, do you find examples where threads operate on data and terminate without passing results to any other threads. So there has to be some mechanism for threads to communicate with each other, and that is why the concept of shared memory is explained in this section. When many threads work in parallel and operate on the same data or read and write from the same memory location, there has to be synchronization between all threads. Thus, thread synchronization is also explained in this section. The last part of this section explains atomic operations, which are very useful in read-modified write conditions.
United States
Great Britain
India
Germany
France
Canada
Russia
Spain
Brazil
Australia
Singapore
Hungary
Ukraine
Luxembourg
Estonia
Lithuania
South Korea
Turkey
Switzerland
Colombia
Taiwan
Chile
Norway
Ecuador
Indonesia
New Zealand
Cyprus
Denmark
Finland
Poland
Malta
Czechia
Austria
Sweden
Italy
Egypt
Belgium
Portugal
Slovenia
Ireland
Romania
Greece
Argentina
Netherlands
Bulgaria
Latvia
South Africa
Malaysia
Japan
Slovakia
Philippines
Mexico
Thailand