12-18-2013, 10:33 PM
Good evening, pearsons and appledaughters,
I have through several minutes of deep analysis and massive cirklejerking invented a new measure for redstone as we know it. This newfinding measure has been given the name "herps"(or singular "herp") and is a measure of, as properinglish put it, logical efficiency of a circuit or device.
The formula of the measure is as following: (maximum) logic-operations divided by total ticks required to execute said operations. For example: an RCA adder would require two sets of xors, two sets of and gates and a singular or gate, which is a total of 5. A normal RCA adder would require 6 ticks to perform all of these operations and from there, the equation is simple: logic-operations / ticks = 5 / 6 = 0.8333... herps.
This measure would not always make sense when comparing two circuits made for completely different purposes. for example an efficient bin->dec decoder would have a herp of possibly 8.
I have totally no idea whatsoever of what you would do with this except for possibly compare CPU'es of different architecture or ALU'es with different operations.
Anyways, tell me what you think and I think it would be awesome to use this measure as an internal thing or just for fun. If you have any ideas of what this could be used for please let me know.
I have through several minutes of deep analysis and massive cirklejerking invented a new measure for redstone as we know it. This newfinding measure has been given the name "herps"(or singular "herp") and is a measure of, as properinglish put it, logical efficiency of a circuit or device.
The formula of the measure is as following: (maximum) logic-operations divided by total ticks required to execute said operations. For example: an RCA adder would require two sets of xors, two sets of and gates and a singular or gate, which is a total of 5. A normal RCA adder would require 6 ticks to perform all of these operations and from there, the equation is simple: logic-operations / ticks = 5 / 6 = 0.8333... herps.
This measure would not always make sense when comparing two circuits made for completely different purposes. for example an efficient bin->dec decoder would have a herp of possibly 8.
I have totally no idea whatsoever of what you would do with this except for possibly compare CPU'es of different architecture or ALU'es with different operations.
Anyways, tell me what you think and I think it would be awesome to use this measure as an internal thing or just for fun. If you have any ideas of what this could be used for please let me know.