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eb06c0ecd2
@ -79,10 +79,11 @@ fn main() {
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}
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```
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This has some upsides: static dispatching of any method calls, allowing for
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inlining and hence usually higher performance. It also has some downsides:
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causing code bloat due to many copies of the same function existing in the
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binary, one for each type.
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This has a great upside: static dispatch allows function calls to be
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inlined because the callee is known at compile time, and inlining is
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the key to good optimization. Static dispatch is fast, but it comes at
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a tradeoff: 'code bloat', due to many copies of the same function
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existing in the binary, one for each type.
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Furthermore, compilers aren’t perfect and may “optimize” code to become slower.
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For example, functions inlined too eagerly will bloat the instruction cache
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