Code repository for the [Portable SIMD Project Group](https://github.com/rust-lang/project-portable-simd).
Please refer to [CONTRIBUTING.md](./CONTRIBUTING.md) for our contributing guidelines.
The docs for this crate are published from the main branch.
You can [read them here][docs].
If you have questions about SIMD, we have begun writing a [guide][simd-guide].
We can also be found on [Zulip][zulip-project-portable-simd].
If you are interested in support for a specific architecture, you may want [stdarch] instead.
## Hello World
Now we're gonna dip our toes into this world with a small SIMD "Hello, World!" example. Make sure your compiler is up to date and using `nightly`. We can do that by running
```bash
rustup update -- nightly
```
or by setting up `rustup default nightly` or else with `cargo +nightly {build,test,run}`. After updating, run
Explanation: We construct our SIMD vectors with methods like `splat` or `from_array`. Next, we can use operators like `+` on them, and the appropriate SIMD instructions will be carried out. When we run `cargo run` you should get `[11.0, 12.0, 13.0, 14.0]`.
Depending on the size of the primitive type, the number of lanes the vector will have varies. For example, 128-bit vectors have four `f32` lanes and two `f64` lanes.
Floating point, signed integers, unsigned integers, and pointers are the [primitive types](https://doc.rust-lang.org/core/primitive/index.html) you're already used to.
The mask types have elements that are "truthy" values, like `bool`, but have an unspecified layout because different architectures prefer different layouts for mask types.