Syrisca
Syrisca is a genus of spiders in the family Miturgidae. It was first described in 1886 by Simon. As of 2017, it contains 9 species.[1]
Syrisca | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Miturgidae |
Genus: | Syrisca Simon[1] |
Type species | |
Syrisca pictilis | |
Species | |
9, see text |
Species
Syrisca comprises the following species:[1]
- Syrisca albopilosa Mello-Leitão, 1941
- Syrisca arabs Simon, 1906
- Syrisca drassiformis Strand, 1906
- Syrisca longicaudata Lessert, 1929
- Syrisca mamillata Caporiacco, 1941
- Syrisca patagonica (Boeris, 1889)
- Syrisca pictilis Simon, 1886
- Syrisca russula Simon, 1886
- Syrisca senegalensis (Walckenaer, 1841)
gollark: > While W is busy with a, other threads might come along and take b from its queue. That is called stealing b. Once a is done, W checks whether b was stolen by another thread and, if not, executes b itself. If W runs out of jobs in its own queue, it will look through the other threads' queues and try to steal work from them.
gollark: > Behind the scenes, Rayon uses a technique called work stealing to try and dynamically ascertain how much parallelism is available and exploit it. The idea is very simple: we always have a pool of worker threads available, waiting for some work to do. When you call join the first time, we shift over into that pool of threads. But if you call join(a, b) from a worker thread W, then W will place b into its work queue, advertising that this is work that other worker threads might help out with. W will then start executing a.
gollark: >
gollark: Maybe I should actually benchmark it.
gollark: It apparently uses "work-stealing" or something, and I think it depends on how complex the operations are.
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