Right. The "edge case" is what fraction of the larger loop needs to be run, to emulate a smaller loop.

As an analogy, look at running tracks. One track is a loop that is 0.25 miles long. Another track is 1.00 miles in a straight line. If you want to run 1.00 miles, this is really easy to figure out where you should start and stop on either track. If you want to run 1.25 miles, it's easy on the loop track, but you have to figure out where to start or stop on the line track.

In CPU terms, leaving the track at an odd place requires more thought, more often, than entering the track at an odd place. So you calculate the fractional component once and jump into the race in the middle.

--
[ e d @ h a l l e y . c c ]


In reply to Re: Re: Duff's Device by halley
in thread Duff's Device by davido

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