Parallel Patterns Library
The Parallel Patterns Library is a Microsoft library designed for use by native C++ developers that provides features for multicore programming.[1] It was first bundled with Visual Studio 2010. It resembles the C++ Standard Library in style and works well with the C++11 language feature, lambdas, also introduced with Visual Studio 2010. For example, this sequential loop:
for (int x=0; x < width; ++x) { //Something parallelizable }
Can be made into a parallel loop by replacing the for with a parallel_for:
#include <ppl.h> // . . . Concurrency::parallel_for (0, width, [=](int x) { //Something parallelizable });
This still requires the developer to know that the loop is parallelizable, but all the other work is done by the library.
MSDN[2] describes the Parallel Patterns Library as an "imperative programming model that promotes scalability and ease-of-use for developing concurrent applications." It uses the Concurrency Runtime for scheduling and resource management and provides generic, type-safe algorithms and containers for use in parallel applications.
References
- ↑ "The Visual C++ Weekly". March 12, 2011. http://paper.li/visualc/news/2011/03/12.
- ↑ "Parallel Patterns Library (PPL) on MSDN". 3 August 2021. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd492418.aspx.
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel Patterns Library.
Read more |