> They asked how often an ipc lock would be used in games and I answered.
You did not answer the question they asked. You answered what would have been a reasonable interpretation of half of their sentence, if there hadn't been more text directly around it.
> You replied to me.
I did.
But if you were purposefully isolating half their sentence, there was no reason for you to argue with that reply. The way you argued implies you weren't doing that on purpose, and thought you were answering their actual question.
> They did ask it because I quoted it and replied. That's how these forums work. People write text and other people reply to it.
No, you quoted half a sentence. That wasn't the whole question. You didn't answer the actual question.
The fact that you're still insisting you answered the question makes it clear why you argued with me when I was just clarifying things. You didn't answer something different on purpose, you're still stubbornly acting like you answered the right thing.
You did not answer their actual question. Period. I'm leaving now.
They asked two questions and I answered one. You hallucinated timings to imaginary functions you couldn't name.
Period. I'm leaving now.
You inserted yourself and had a meltdown. I don't know why this was so upsetting but you couldn't actually give a single technical detail, it was just "I just know" and "ask them what function I'm talking about".
> No it wasn't (I think you meant rhetorical). They might just have not expected a reply.
I don't mean rhetorical. I mean abstract in that it wasn't about specific locks, it was about types of lock. That's why I didn't try to name any particular functions.
> I didn't reply to you.
In your future replies to me.
If you're not talking about later replies... are you implying you were calling my first comment a meltdown? Weird.
> I mentioned it once you mentioned overhead, because that's what is actually important between processes.
The main worry expressed in the original post was about the throughput of using an IPC lock in places that don't need an IPC lock. That's the overhead I was talking about.
You did not answer the question they asked. You answered what would have been a reasonable interpretation of half of their sentence, if there hadn't been more text directly around it.
> You replied to me.
I did.
But if you were purposefully isolating half their sentence, there was no reason for you to argue with that reply. The way you argued implies you weren't doing that on purpose, and thought you were answering their actual question.