Lecture 15: Transitioning from Sequential Programming to Concurrent Programming in the Ticket Sale Example
author: Jerry Cain,
Computer Science Department, Stanford University
published: Sept. 7, 2010, recorded: April 2008, views: 2694
released under terms of: Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC-BY-NC)
published: Sept. 7, 2010, recorded: April 2008, views: 2694
released under terms of: Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial (CC-BY-NC)
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Description
I went ahead and did something like this. I wrote it a little bit differently last time, but I’ll write it like this, num tickets is equal to 150. All I want to do, in this brute force four loop, I’ll write agent is equal to one agent less than or equal to num agents, agent ++ – I went ahead and I called this function, called sell tickets, and I’m gonna frame in terms of the agent ID num tickets dib, not agents, so that it’s planarized in terms of these two values right here, and [inaudible] each ticket agent knows that he or she has to sell that many tickets as part of his or her function call and that’s it. ...
See the whole transcript at Programming Paradigms - Lecture 15
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