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<p>I would assume that there are many, many more consumers than producers...</p>
<p>--colin</p>
<p>On 2015-11-11 17:27, Richard Welty wrote:</p>
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<div class="pre" style="margin: 0; padding: 0; font-family: monospace">On 11/11/15 9:51 AM, David Earl wrote:
<blockquote type="cite" style="padding: 0 0.4em; border-left: #1010ff 2px solid; margin: 0"><br /><br /> On Wed, 11 Nov 2015 at 14:01 Richard Welty <<a href="mailto:rwelty@averillpark.net">rwelty@averillpark.net</a><br /> <mailto:<a href="mailto:rwelty@averillpark.net">rwelty@averillpark.net</a>>> wrote:<br /><br /> it's an inevitable consequence of serializing a complex data<br /> structure.<br /> we either find ways to deal with it or else we accept limits on what<br /> we can accomplish.<br /><br /><br /> Or we change the way we do it.<br /><br /> For example, emitting the relations first would help somewhat.</blockquote>
this simply replaces energy expended in the consumer with energy<br /> expended in the producer. this is not necessarily bad, but it is a<br /> significant architectural design decision.<br /><br /> richard</div>
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