7 votes A new approach to multiplication opens the door to better quantum computers Posted May 4, 2019 by gpl Tags: mathematics, algorithms, computers, computing.quantum, science.computer, author.kevin hartnett, source.quanta magazine https://www.quantamagazine.org/a-new-approach-to-multiplication-opens-the-door-to-better-quantum-computers-20190424/ Link information This data is scraped automatically and may be incorrect. Word count 816 words 3 comments Collapse replies Expand all Comments sorted by most votes newest first order posted relevance OK [3] Archimedes May 5, 2019 Link I expected some explanation of "tail call optimization". That's the real meat here and they didn't explained it hardly at all. I expected some explanation of "tail call optimization". That's the real meat here and they didn't explained it hardly at all. 2 votes [2] Emerald_Knight May 5, 2019 Link Parent Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :) Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :) 2 votes Archimedes May 5, 2019 Link Parent That's pretty cool. Thanks! That's pretty cool. Thanks! 1 vote
[3] Archimedes May 5, 2019 Link I expected some explanation of "tail call optimization". That's the real meat here and they didn't explained it hardly at all. I expected some explanation of "tail call optimization". That's the real meat here and they didn't explained it hardly at all. 2 votes [2] Emerald_Knight May 5, 2019 Link Parent Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :) Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :) 2 votes Archimedes May 5, 2019 Link Parent That's pretty cool. Thanks! That's pretty cool. Thanks! 1 vote
[2] Emerald_Knight May 5, 2019 Link Parent Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :) Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :) 2 votes Archimedes May 5, 2019 Link Parent That's pretty cool. Thanks! That's pretty cool. Thanks! 1 vote
I expected some explanation of "tail call optimization". That's the real meat here and they didn't explained it hardly at all.
Here is a quick StackOverflow answer on the subject :)
That's pretty cool. Thanks!