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What is the difference between coarse-grained and fine-grained?

I have searched these terms on Google, but I couldn't find what they mean.

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2 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

From Wikipedia (granularity):

Granularity is the extent to which a system is broken down into small parts, either the system itself or its description or observation. It is the extent to which a larger entity is subdivided. For example, a yard broken into inches has finer granularity than a yard broken into feet.

Coarse-grained systems consist of fewer, larger components than fine-grained systems; a coarse-grained description of a system regards large subcomponents while a fine-grained description regards smaller components of which the larger ones are composed.

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if you googled with these key words;Coarse-grained vs fine-grained you would get this link

Coarse-grained systems consist of fewer, larger components than fine-grained systems; a coarse-grained description of a system regards large subcomponents while a fine-grained description regards smaller components of which the larger ones are composed. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Granularity

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