Erm, you realize that just 30 x (n) double precision floats would be 581,454,720,000 bytes ( 541 gigabytes ). Perl's builtin limits aside (which unless you're on a 64bit platform and have a 64bit compiled perl (see the perl installation instructions for how to do this) you've long passed), unless you're on some really big iron you're not going to be able to hold even just the raw data in memory (let alone when you take into account overhead for perl's data structures).
In reply to Re: Numeric limits in perl
by Fletch
in thread Numeric limits in perl
by npiazza
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