• NoSpotOfGround@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The real meat of the story is in the referenced blog post: https://blog.codingconfessions.com/p/how-unix-spell-ran-in-64kb-ram

    TL;DR

    If you’re short on time, here’s the key engineering story:

    • McIlroy’s first innovation was a clever linguistics-based stemming algorithm that reduced the dictionary to just 25,000 words while improving accuracy.

    • For fast lookups, he initially used a Bloom filter—perhaps one of its first production uses. Interestingly, Dennis Ritchie provided the implementation. They tuned it to have such a low false positive rate that they could skip actual dictionary lookups.

    • When the dictionary grew to 30,000 words, the Bloom filter approach became impractical, leading to innovative hash compression techniques.

    • They computed that 27-bit hash codes would keep collision probability acceptably low, but needed compression.

    • McIlroy’s solution was to store differences between sorted hash codes, after discovering these differences followed a geometric distribution.

    • Using Golomb’s code, a compression scheme designed for geometric distributions, he achieved 13.60 bits per word—remarkably close to the theoretical minimum of 13.57 bits.

    • Finally, he partitioned the compressed data to speed up lookups, trading a small memory increase (final size ~14 bits per word) for significantly faster performance.

  • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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    2 days ago

    Old school coding and game programing was magic. The clever tricks that nes game programmers came up with to work around hardware limitations was phenomenal. It went way beyond the bushes and clouds in mario being the same thing but in a different color.

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      15 hours ago

      The old scrollers in non-consoles (consoles had hardware scrollers) used funky tech too to reduce overdraw. Fun times.

    • jasoman@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      In oblivion on Xbox they even reboot the console on a loading screen to clear up ram.

    • General_Effort@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      nes game programmers

      Were these guys even Real Programmers?

      Here’s a great talk by a guy who worked on a 1982 game for the Atari 2600, a game console first released in 1977. It’s a fascinating insight into the early evolution of computing. They didn’t work around limitations. They used a machine to do whatever it could.

      If anyone has ever wondered by what standard C is a high-level language, this is for you. Or if you want to know how we ever could have developed something to connect the abstract logic of some algorithm with some glowing pixels on a screen.

      Pitfall Classic Postmortem With David Crane Panel at GDC 2011 (Atari 2600)

      There’s an ancient myth that a god created the first pair of tongs. Tongs need to be forged in a smithy. Obviously, you need tongs for that.

      • VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        IIRC, someone got with the author of that bit of code to ask how they came up with it, but they had simply learned it from someone else. So they tracked them down and found that they had also learned it from someone else. They eventually landed on Greg Walsh as the original author, but for a bit the code had no known origin.

      • Blooper@lemmynsfw.com
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        23 hours ago

        I read this article and I know it’s written in English, but I’ve accepted defeat in trying to understand it.

        I write code for a living and I’m doing my best to ignore the feelings of inadequacy I’m currently experiencing.

        • xavier666@lemm.ee
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          16 hours ago

          but I’ve accepted defeat in trying to understand it

          I may have shared the link but even I don’t know how it how it works.

          It’s like admiring the Eiffel Tower; you can understand that it’s a marvel of engineering without understanding the underlying engineering concepts. Such experiences are rare but they truly humble you.

          Regarding the square root, understand the following concepts

          1. Bit shifting simply shift the bits to a certain side (Left or right) => 0010 << 1 0100
          2. Mathematically, it multiplies or divides the input number with a factor of 2, depending upon the type of shift
          3. If you shift the number n with a nice shift amount x (I have greatly greatly over-simplified this), then you can calculate the inverse sq. root since inverse square root is 2^(-1/2)
          4. Calculating the inverse square root manually will take lots of clock cycles, which was not feasible for a FPS game with the limited h/w
          5. Bit shifting is a lot faster since we are not computing, but instead shifting

          The resultant shifting gives us an answer which is close enough to the answer, and that is good enough for FPS games for calculation of reflections.

          Source for bitshifting

          PS: Someone who is more experienced in this domain can correct me if I’m wrong.

  • Troy@lemmy.ca
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    2 days ago

    Long article for one sentence of trivia and no info on the algo itself. The death of the internet is upon us.

    • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Doesn’t even name the algorithm, and somehow spells LZMA wrong, despite just having written it out longhand.

      Well, it’s PC Gamer.

      [edit] I still can’t figure out if they’re referencing LZW encoding… the L and Z being the same Lempel and Ziv from LZMA, but with Welch having a different solution for the rest of the algorithm due to size constraints.

    • GrabtharsHammer@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I’d like to imagine they took the short trivia fact and applied the inverse of the compression algorithm to bloat it into something that satisfied the editor.

    • rice@lemmy.org
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      2 days ago

      The blog post it links to has all the info, but it is more of a series of changes to the dictionary instead of 1 set thing

  • 0x0@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    Only 1 GiB of RAM? Moooom!
    Shut up Johnny, Voyager’s still out there with way less.

    • rmuk@feddit.uk
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, but I’ve not got two hundred Firefox tabs open on Voyager.