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Hands-On High Performance Programming with Qt 5

You're reading from   Hands-On High Performance Programming with Qt 5 Build cross-platform applications using concurrency, parallel programming, and memory management

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789531244
Length 384 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Marek Krajewski Marek Krajewski
Author Profile Icon Marek Krajewski
Marek Krajewski
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Performant Programs 2. Profiling to Find Bottlenecks FREE CHAPTER 3. Deep Dive into C++ and Performance 4. Using Data Structures and Algorithms Efficiently 5. An In-Depth Guide to Concurrency and Multithreading 6. Performance Failures and How to Overcome Them 7. Understanding I/O Performance and Overcoming Related Problems 8. Optimizing Graphical Performance 9. Optimizing Network Performance 10. Qt Performance on Embedded and Mobile Platforms 11. Testing and Deploying Qt Applications 12. Assessments 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Further reading

If you would like to learn more about basic performance techniques and processor architectures, these are the resources I'd recommend:

  • The short book, The Performance of Open Source Applications, edited by Travish Armstrong (available on http://aosabook.org, 2013) contains case studies showing mostly applications of the basic principles we discussed, for example, in the chapter about the Ninjia build system.
  • Books about C++ performance, such as, this admittedly somewhat older books, Efficient C++ Performance Programming Techniques, by Dov Bulka and David Mayhew, Addison Wesley 1999, (by the way, this was my first computer performance book!) or a more recent Optimized C++ by Kurt Guntheroth, O'Reiily 2013, discuss many of the traditional basic performance techniques in their first chapters.
  • Power and Performance. Software Analysis and Optimization, by Jim Kukunas, Morgam Kaufman 2015, discusses the history and architecture of modern Intel processors, introduces tools for obtaining CPU performance data and explains some low-level performance techniques. However, this book concentrates on Linux operating systems and tools.
  • An even more in-depth discussion of performance gotchas in different processor architectures can be found on Agner's Fog site (http://www.agner.org/optimize/microarchitecture.pdf and others, 2018) and is directed more toward compiler writers. The widely cited article by Ullrich Drepper What every programmer needs to know about memory (available on http://www.akkadia.org/drepper/cpumemory.pdf, 2007) provides many details on RAM memory, caches, virtual memory, and possible low-level memory optimization techniques.
  • Lastly, the most famous quote about performance optimization by Donald Knuth can be looked up in his article Structured programming with go to statements, ACM Computing. Survey., 6(4), 1974.
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