That’s what makes us humans different from computers. We don’t ask how high, we just do it. Now, if it were a C pointer it would jump anywhere from 0 to 2^32-1. That’s why C is more suited for artificial intelligence than it might initially seem. Thanks for coming to my tedx talk
That’s what makes us humans different from computers. We don’t ask how high, we just do it. Now, if it were a C pointer it would jump anywhere from 0 to 2^32-1. That’s why C is more suited for artificial intelligence than it might initially seem. Thanks for coming to my tedx talk
Pointers are ackshully 48 bits on amd64 (which is most PCs and servers)
Well ackshully newer CPUs support 5-level-paging which uses 56 bits.
I was mostly joking about a stray pointer of type uint32_t*
So the size of the pointer itself doesn’t matter