Did you ever saw a char and thought: “Damn, 1 byte for a single char is pretty darn inefficient”? No? Well I did. So what I decided to do instead is to pack 5 chars, convert each char to a 2 digit integer and then concat those 5 2 digit ints together into one big unsigned int and boom, I saved 5 chars using only 4 instead of 5 bytes. The reason this works is, because one unsigned int is a ten digit long number and so I can save one char using 2 digits. In theory you could save 32 different chars using this technique (the first two digits of an unsigned int are 42 and if you dont want to account for a possible 0 in the beginning you end up with 32 chars). If you would decide to use all 10 digits you could save exactly 3 chars. Why should anyone do that? Idk. Is it way to much work to be useful? Yes. Was it funny? Yes.
Anyone whos interested in the code: Heres how I did it in C: https://pastebin.com/hDeHijX6
Yes I know, the code is probably bad, but I do not care. It was just a funny useless idea I had.
Interesting idea but type conversion and parsing is much more slower than wasting 1 byte. Nowadays memory is “free” and the main issue is the execution speed.
I know. This whole thing was never meant to be very useful, and more like a proof of concept
Fuck it. *uses
ulong
to store a boolean*So, python?
Alignment wastes much more anyways