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Some perspective: you need a data rate of roughly 480K bytes per second for 32 bit floats, and twice that for 64 bit, assuming a binary format. You should plan for faster rates than that.Robert Harvey– Robert Harvey2025-06-13 00:57:36 +00:00Commented Jun 13 at 0:57
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Given the requirements here, you can write them to a file as binary: write(1,floats,size(floats)*8). You could also write them to /dev/null and still comply with the requirements.TZubiri– TZubiri2025-06-13 05:23:11 +00:00Commented Jun 13 at 5:23
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Gave an answer for this very generic solution, this is a huge candidate to mark as duplicate, very likely there is already an answer like this one, but if not this will serve as a base.TZubiri– TZubiri2025-06-13 05:50:52 +00:00Commented Jun 13 at 5:50
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Is there a specific reason why you don't want to give us more context? Tell us how the data is created - is there a specific device which creates the events? How is the data processed afterwards? What is the overall goal of the system?Doc Brown– Doc Brown2025-06-13 18:43:05 +00:00Commented Jun 13 at 18:43
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1@AndrewHenle Output needs to be read after the code execution is finished i.e. we can read the output offline.user146290– user1462902025-06-16 08:33:41 +00:00Commented Jun 16 at 8:33
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