I just flagged the following two comments from the question Is it worth bothering to align AVX-256 memory stores?;
Good question! I don't know the answer off the top of my head and don't have the time to research and write up a good answer, but I'm sure someone else will. In the meantime, I'll wonder aloud why you are writing your own code for this memory copying, rather than using something like Agner Fog's library that is already tuned for the instruction set of your choice.
and
I see. Yes, being GPL would be a problem. But there isn't all that much difference between x86-32 and x86-64, so it seems like the vast majority of that optimized 32-bit code could be trivially ported to the 64-bit builds, gaining the performance improvement for free. Sure, you'd still have to write new code to target brand-new instruction sets like AVX-256, but their penetration in the wild is still very low, so it's probably not even worth it to think about shipping these builds. You'd only need this if you were running it on a backend server that you controlled.
These comments may have been helpful to the original asker, but do not address the question at hand. So my questions are:
- Should comments like these be flagged as "It's no longer needed."?
- Regardless of what the policies are, will moderators bother with removing comments from five-year-old questions?
- Does it matter if the comments to be flagged have received upvotes?
- Does it matter if the author of the comments is a moderator and/or have a very high reputation?
As these are yes/no questions, yes/no answers supported by references are perfectly fine.