Whetstone
See also: whetstone
English
Etymology
The benchmark is named after the Whetstone compiler built at a English Electric Company division in Whetstone, Leicestershire.
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /wɛtstəʊn/
Proper noun
Whetstone
- An area in the borough of Barnet, Greater London, England (OS grid ref TQ2693).
- A large village and civil parish in Blaby district, Leicestershire, England (OS grid ref SP5597).
- A census-designated place in Cochise County, Arizona, United States.
- An unincorporated community in Clay County, West Virginia, United States.
- A surname.
- (computing) A synthetic benchmark for evaluating the power and performance of a computer, primarily based on floating-point arithmetic.
- Coordinate term: Dhrystone
- 2016, Joseph D. Dumas II, Computer Architecture: Fundamentals and Principles of Computer Design, second edition, CRC Press, →ISBN:
- Developed in the early 1970s by Harold Curnow and Brian Wichmann, Whetstones was originally released in Algol and Fortran versions but was later translated into several other languages.
- 2018, Sajjan G. Shiva, Advanced Computer Architectures, CRC Press, →ISBN, page 67:
- Whetstone reflects mostly numerical computing, using a substantial amount of floating-point arithmetic.
Noun
Whetstone (plural Whetstones)
- (computing) A single instruction of the Whetstone benchmark, often expressed as a value per second.
- 1994, Binod C. Agrawal, Larry R. Symes, Future of Computerisation in Institutions of Higher Learning, Concept Publishing Company, →ISBN, page 92:
- The Prodigy 4 does 500,000 Whetstones.
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